An acoustic backscattering technique for the detection of transient cavitation produced by microsecond pulses of ultrasound. 1990

R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 06520.

An acoustic backscattering technique for detecting transient cavitation produced by 10-microseconds-long pulses of 757-kHz ultrasound is described. The system employs 10-microseconds-long, 30-MHz center frequency tone bursts that scatter from cavitation microbubbles. Experiments were performed with suspensions of hydrophobic polystyrene spheres in ultraclean water. Transient cavitation threshold pressures measured with the active cavitation detector (ACD) were always less than or equal to those measured using a passive acoustic detection scheme. The measured cavitation thresholds decreased with increasing dissolved gas content and increasing suspended particle concentration. Results also show that ultrasonic irradiation of the polystyrene sphere suspensions by the ACD lowered the threshold pressure measured with the passive detector. A possible mechanism through which suspensions of hydrophobic particles might nucleate bubbles is presented.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D004581 Electronics The study, control, and application of the conduction of ELECTRICITY through gases or vacuum, or through semiconducting or conducting materials. (McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms, 6th ed) Electronic
D000161 Acoustic Stimulation Use of sound to elicit a response in the nervous system. Auditory Stimulation,Stimulation, Acoustic,Stimulation, Auditory
D013535 Suspensions Colloids with liquid continuous phase and solid dispersed phase; the term is used loosely also for solid-in-gas (AEROSOLS) and other colloidal systems; water-insoluble drugs may be given as suspensions. Suspension
D014465 Ultrasonics A subfield of acoustics dealing in the radio frequency range higher than acoustic SOUND waves (approximately above 20 kilohertz). Ultrasonic radiation is used therapeutically (DIATHERMY and ULTRASONIC THERAPY) to generate HEAT and to selectively destroy tissues. It is also used in diagnostics, for example, ULTRASONOGRAPHY; ECHOENCEPHALOGRAPHY; and ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, to visually display echoes received from irradiated tissues. Ultrasonic

Related Publications

R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
January 1982, Ultrasound in medicine & biology,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
June 1988, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
August 1998, Journal of endourology,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
April 2019, Ultrasonics,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
January 1996, The Journal of heart valve disease,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
November 1990, The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
November 2009, Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
December 2005, Biosensors & bioelectronics,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
January 2014, Ultrasonics sonochemistry,
R A Roy, and S I Madanshetty, and R E Apfel
September 2021, IEEE transactions on ultrasonics, ferroelectrics, and frequency control,
Copied contents to your clipboard!