Vapour bubbles produced by long-pulsed laser: a race between advection and phase transition.

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2024-11

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Abstract

Vapor bubbles produced by long-pulsed laser often have complex non-spherical shapes that reflect some characteristics of the laser beam. The transition between two commonly observed shapes - namely, a rounded pear-like shape and an elongated conical shape - is studied using a new computational model that combines compressible multiphase fluid dynamics with laser radiation and phase transition. Two laboratory experiments are simulated, in which Holmium:YAG and Thulium fiber lasers are used respectively to generate bubbles of different shapes. In both cases, the predicted bubble nucleation and morphology agree reasonably well with the experimental observation. The full-field results of laser irradiance, temperature, velocity, and pressure are analyzed to explain bubble dynamics and energy transmission. It is found that due to the lasting energy input, the vapor bubble's dynamics is driven not only by advection, but also by the continued vaporization at its surface. Vaporization lasts less than 1 microsecond in the case of the pear-shaped bubble, compared to over 50 microseconds for the elongated bubble. It is thus hypothesized that the bubble's morphology is determined by a competition. When the speed of advection is higher than that of vaporization, the bubble tends to grow spherically. Otherwise, it elongates along the laser beam direction. To test this hypothesis, the two speeds are defined analytically using a model problem, then estimated for the experiments using simulation results. The results support the hypothesis. They also suggest that when the laser's power is fixed, a higher laser absorption coefficient and a narrower beam facilitate bubble elongation.

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boiling, bubble dynamics, cavitation

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Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1017/jfm.2024.989

Publication Info

Zhao, Xuning, Wentao Ma, Junqin Chen, Gaoming Xiang, Pei Zhong and Kevin Wang (2024). Vapour bubbles produced by long-pulsed laser: a race between advection and phase transition. Journal of fluid mechanics, 999. p. A103. 10.1017/jfm.2024.989 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34180.

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Scholars@Duke

Chen

Junqin Chen

Postdoctoral Associate
Zhong

Pei Zhong

Professor in the Thomas Lord Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science

My research focuses on engineering and technology development with applications in the non-invasive or minimally invasive treatment of kidney stone disease via shock wave and laser lithotripsy, high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) and immunotherapy for cancer treatment, acoustic and optical cavitation, and ultrasound neuromodulation via sonogenetics. 

We are taking an integrated and translational approach that combines fundamental research with engineering and applied technology development to devise novel and enabling ultrasonic, optical, and mechanical tools for a variety of clinical applications. We are interested in shock wave/laser-fluid-bubble-solid interaction, and resultant mechanical and thermal fields that lead to material damage and removal.  We also investigate the stress response of biological cell and tissue induced by cavitation and ultrasound exposure, mediated through mechanosensitive ion channels, such as Piezo 1. Our research activities are primarily supported by NIH and through collaborations with the medical device industry.


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