INVESTIGADORES
BONETTO Fabian Jose
artículos
Título:
Numerical and experimental study of dissociation in an air-water single-bubble sonoluminescence system
Autor/es:
G. F. PUENTE, R. URTEAGA, F. J. BONETTO
Revista:
PHYSICAL REVIEW E - STATISTICAL PHYSICS, PLASMAS, FLUIDS AND RELATED INTERDISCIPLINARY TOPICS
Editorial:
APS
Referencias:
Año: 2005 vol. 72 p. 1 - 10
ISSN:
1063-651X
Resumen:
We performed a comprehensive numerical and experimental analysis of dissociation effects in an air bubble in water acoustically levitated in a spherical resonator. Our numerical approach is based on suitable models for the different effects considered. We compared model predictions with experimental results obtained in our laboratory in the whole phase parameter space, for acoustic pressures from the bubble dissolution limit up to bubble extinction. The effects were taken into account simultaneously to consider the transition from nonsonoluminescence to sonoluminescence bubbles. The model includes (1) inside the bubble, transient and spatially nonuniform heat transfer using a collocation points method, dissociation of O2 and N2, and mass diffusion of vapor in the noncondensable gases; (2) at the bubble interface, nonequilibrium evaporation and condensation of water and a temperature jump due to the accommodation coefficient; (3) in the liquid, transient and spatially nonuniform heat transfer using a collocation points method, and mass diffusion of the gas in the liquid. The model is completed with a Rayleigh-Plesset equation with liquid compressible terms and vapor mass transfer. We computed the boundary for the shape instability based on the temporal evolution of the computed radius. The model is valid for an arbitrary number of dissociable gases dissolved in the liquid. We also obtained absolute measurements for R(t) using two photodetectors and Mie scattering calculations. The robust technique used allows the estimation of experimental results of absolute R0 and Pa. The technique is based on identifying the bubble dissolution limit coincident with the parametric instability in (Pa,R0) parameter space. We take advantage of the fact that this point can be determined experimentally with high precision and replicability. We computed the equilibrium concentration of the different gaseous species and water vapor during collapse as a function of Pa and R0. The model obtains from first principles the result that in sonoluminescence the bubble is practically 100% argon for air dissolved in water. Therefore, the dissociation reactions in air bubbles must be taken into account for quantitative computations of maximum temperatures. The agreement found between the numerical and experimental data is very good in the whole parameter space explored. We do not fit any parameter in the model. We believe that we capture all the relevant physics with the model.