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  4. Intensifying cavitating flows in microfluidic devices with poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) microbubbles
 
research article

Intensifying cavitating flows in microfluidic devices with poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) microbubbles

Ghorbani, Morteza
•
Chen, Hongjian
•
Villanueva, Luis Guillermo  
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October 1, 2018
Physics Of Fluids

Cavitation and the energy associated with the collapse of resulting cavitation bubbles constitute an important research subject. The collapse of the hydrodynamic cavitation bubbles at the outlet of the flow elements leads to a high energy release and generates localized shock waves and a large temperature rise on exposed surfaces. The concept of "hydrodynamic cavitation on chip" is an emerging topic which emphasizes phase change phenomena in microscale and their utilizations in energy and biomedical applications. This study is aimed to investigate the potential of poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) Microbubbles (MBs) to generate cavitation bubbles and to evaluate their effects on flow regimes and energy dissipation. For this, three different microchannel configurations with different roughness elements were considered. The structural side wall and surface roughened channels were fabricated along with the smooth channel according to the techniques adopted from semiconductor based micro-fabrication. The upstream pressure varied from 1 to 7 MPa, and the flow patterns were recorded and analyzed using a high-speed camera. The pressure was locally measured at three locations along the microfluidic devices to determine the conditions for fully developed cavitating flows. The results were compared to the pure water case, and different trends for the cavitating flow pattern transitions were obtained for the water-PVA MB solution case. Accordingly, the twin cavity clouds extended to the end of the side wall roughened channel at a lower upstream pressure for the case of PVA MBs, while the smooth and surface roughened channels do not demonstrate this flow pattern. In addition, the cavitation number has the lowest values under the same working conditions for the case of PVA MBs. Moreover, the impact pressure generated by the bubble collapse inside the side wall roughened channel for the case of PVA MBs was notably higher than that for pure water. Published by AIP Publishing.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1063/1.5051606
Web of Science ID

WOS:000448975800005

Author(s)
Ghorbani, Morteza
•
Chen, Hongjian
•
Villanueva, Luis Guillermo  
•
Grishenkov, Dmitry
•
Kosar, Ali
Date Issued

2018-10-01

Published in
Physics Of Fluids
Volume

30

Issue

10

Article Number

102001

Subjects

Mechanics

•

Physics, Fluids & Plasmas

•

Mechanics

•

Physics

•

hydrodynamic cavitation

•

micro

•

microchannels

•

visualization

•

minichannels

•

regimes

•

bubble

•

agents

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
NEMS  
Available on Infoscience
December 13, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/152648
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