1st Edition

Sonoluminescence

By F. Ronald Young Copyright 2004
    250 Pages 126 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    While it is still a mystery of how a low-energy-density sound wave can concentrate enough energy in a small enough volume to cause the emission of light, research in acoustic cavitation and sonoluminescence has lead to plausible theories in which the source of light can be experimentally sustained. It has also lead to promising applications, such as ultrasound cleaning and the directed delivery of drugs through the cell walls.

    Sonoluminescence is a comprehensive account of the subject from its discovery in 1934 to the present day, including experimental aspects and theoretical origins. The author explains how adiabatic heating achieved when the bubble collapses determines the intensity, length, and spectral properties of the light pulse. He also describes the many experiments carried out to further explain single-bubble sonoluminescence, such as measuring the length of time light is emitted, the size and stability of bubbles when light is emitted, and the effects of adding noble gases to increase light intensity.

    The final chapters of Sonoluminescence give suggestions for future work and applications in fluid physics, acoustics, pipelines, ultrasonics, sonochemistry, and medicine. Through his extensive studies of acoustic cavitation, the author discusses the multiple theories that have been put forward to explain sonoluminescence, condensing selected research from over 40 years of experience into one volume to explain how light can be produced from sound.

    INTRODUCTION
    How the book is organized
    History of sonoluminescence
    Bubble dynamics
    Acoustic cavitation
    References

    MULTIBUBBLE SONOLUMINESCENCE
    Introduction
    Dependence of multibubble sonoluminescence on various factors
    Spectra from multibubble sonoluminescence
    Light from hydrodynamic cavitation
    Light from agitated mercury
    Light from collapsing glass spheres
    References


    SINGLE BUBBLE SONOLUMINESCENCE
    History
    Introduction
    Production of a single sonoluminescing bubble
    Measurement of the bubble motion - Mie scattering
    Bubble dynamics of single bubble sonoluminescence
    Influence of argon on stable sonoluminescence
    Ambient radius
    Spectra from single bubble sonoluminescence
    Sonoluminescence pulse width
    Effect of reduction of ambient pressure on single-bubble sonoluminescence
    Single-bubble sonoluminescence in microgravity
    Evidence for nuclear reactions in sonoluminescence
    Single cavitation bubble luminescence
    Harmonic enhancement of single bubble sonoluminescence
    Period doubling in sonoluminescence
    Vortex rings and particle drift in sonoluminescence
    Boosting single bubble sonoluminescence with a drop of glycerine in water
    Single bubble sonoluminescence in air-saturated water
    References

    THEORIES OF SONOLUMINESCENCE
    Introduction
    The triboluminescence theory
    The electrical microdischarge theories
    The mechanochemical theory
    The chemiluminescent theory

    Biography

    Young\, F. Ronald