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      The effect of static pressure on the inertial cavitation threshold

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="d4859695e75">The amplitude of the acoustic pressure required to nucleate a gas or vapor bubble in a fluid, and to have that bubble undergo an inertial collapse, is termed the inertial cavitation threshold. The magnitude of the inertial cavitation threshold is typically limited by mechanisms other than homogeneous nucleation such that the theoretical maximum is never achieved. However, the onset of inertial cavitation can be suppressed by increasing the static pressure of the fluid. The inertial cavitation threshold was measured in ultrapure water at static pressures up to 30 MPa (300 bars) by exciting a radially symmetric standing wave field in a spherical resonator driven at a resonant frequency of 25.5 kHz. The threshold was found to increase linearly with the static pressure; an exponentially decaying temperature dependence was also found. The nature and properties of the nucleating mechanisms were investigated by comparing the measured thresholds to an independent analysis of the particulate content and available models for nucleation. </p>

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
          The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
          Acoustical Society of America (ASA)
          0001-4966
          August 2012
          August 2012
          : 132
          : 2
          : 728-737
          Article
          10.1121/1.4733539
          22894195
          2ed9dfdf-ee3b-4de4-9b39-6b5f26c8d50f
          © 2012
          History

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