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Better life through bubbles and biomedical ultrasound

Abstract:
Many environmental, biological, and engineered fluidic systems invariably involve bubbles suspended in a liquid. These bubbles can have a profound impact on the mechanical and acoustical properties of the multi-phase medium. When exposed to moderate-to-high amplitude acoustic forcing, bubbles can respond nonlinearly – a process known as acoustic cavitation. Cavitating bubbles can lead to a range of physical effects, including microstreaming, collapse microjets, inertially confined cavity collapses, and an associated host of mechanical and chemical effects. In this paper we provide a brief survey of linear bubble acoustics and cavitation effects. We provide examples of how these phenomena can be put to positive use in applications related to biomedical ultrasound imaging and high-intensity ultrasound therapy.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Reviewed (other)

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Engineering Science
Oxford college:
Harris Manchester College
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Acoustical Society of Korea
Host title:
9th Western Pacific Acoustics Conference
Journal:
9th Western Pacific Acoustics Conference More from this journal
Publication date:
2006-06-26
Acceptance date:
2006-06-26


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Pubs id:
pubs:959452
UUID:
uuid:c86d111f-f57e-45cc-8230-4060c85a030f
Local pid:
pubs:959452
Source identifiers:
959452
Deposit date:
2019-01-14

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