Literature DB >> 23428156

Microscale capillary wave turbulence excited by high frequency vibration.

Jeremy Blamey1, Leslie Y Yeo, James R Friend.   

Abstract

Low frequency (O(10 Hz-10 kHz)) vibration excitation of capillary waves has been extensively studied for nearly two centuries. Such waves appear at the excitation frequency or at rational multiples of the excitation frequency through nonlinear coupling as a result of the finite displacement of the wave, most often at one-half the excitation frequency in so-called Faraday waves and twice this frequency in superharmonic waves. Less understood, however, are the dynamics of capillary waves driven by high-frequency vibration (>O(100 kHz)) and small interface length scales, an arrangement ideal for a broad variety of applications, from nebulizers for pulmonary drug delivery to complex nanoparticle synthesis. In the few studies conducted to date, a marked departure from the predictions of classical Faraday wave theory has been shown, with the appearance of broadband capillary wave generation from 100 Hz to the excitation frequency and beyond, without a clear explanation. We show that weak wave turbulence is the dominant mechanism in the behavior of the system, as evident from wave height frequency spectra that closely follow the Rayleigh-Jeans spectral response η ≈ ω(-17/12) as a consequence of a period-halving, weakly turbulent cascade that appears within a 1 mm water drop whether driven by thickness-mode or surface acoustic Rayleigh wave excitation. However, such a cascade is one-way, from low to high frequencies. The mechanism of exciting the cascade with high-frequency acoustic waves is an acoustic streaming-driven turbulent jet in the fluid bulk, driving the fundamental capillary wave resonance through the well-known coupling between bulk flow and surface waves. Unlike capillary waves, turbulent acoustic streaming can exhibit subharmonic cascades from high to low frequencies; here it appears from the excitation frequency all the way to the fundamental modes of the capillary wave at some four orders of magnitude in frequency less than the excitation frequency, enabling the capillary weakly turbulent wave cascade to form from the fundamental capillary wave upward.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23428156     DOI: 10.1021/la304608a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  13 in total

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4.  Experimental research on surface acoustic wave microfluidic atomization for drug delivery.

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7.  Excitation of Faraday-like body waves in vibrated living earthworms.

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Authors:  Heba Ahmed; Amgad R Rezk; Joseph J Richardson; Lauren K Macreadie; Ravichandar Babarao; Edwin L H Mayes; Lillian Lee; Leslie Y Yeo
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Review 9.  High Frequency Sonoprocessing: A New Field of Cavitation-Free Acoustic Materials Synthesis, Processing, and Manipulation.

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10.  Computational Image Analysis of Guided Acoustic Waves Enables Rheological Assessment of Sub-nanoliter Volumes.

Authors:  Muhammad Arslan Khalid; Aniruddha Ray; Steve Cohen; Manlio Tassieri; Andriejus Demčenko; Derek Tseng; Julien Reboud; Aydogan Ozcan; Jonathan M Cooper
Journal:  ACS Nano       Date:  2019-09-19       Impact factor: 15.881

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