Interparticle Collisions Driven by Ultrasound
Abstract
Ultrasound has become an important synthetic tool in liquid-solid chemical reactions, but the origins of the observed enhancements remained unknown. The effects of high-intensity ultrasound on solid-liquid slurries were examined. Turbulent flow and shock waves produced by acoustic cavitation were found to drive metal particles together at sufficiently high velocities to induce melting upon collision. A series of transitionmetal powders were used to probe the maximum temperatures and speeds reached during such interparticle collisions. Metal particles that were irradiated in hydrocarbon liquids with ultrasound underwent collisions at roughly half the speed of sound and generated localized effective temperatures between 2600^circC and 3400^circC at the point of impact for particles with an average diameter of ~10 μm.
- Publication:
-
Science
- Pub Date:
- March 1990
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1990Sci...247.1067D