A method for predicting the number of active bubbles in sonochemical reactors
•A method was developed for predicting the number of active bubbles in acoustical cavitation field.•The number of bubbles was determined using material balances for H2O2, OH and HO2.•The effect of ultrasonic frequency on the number of active bubbles was examined.•Increasing ultrasonic frequency lead...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ultrasonics sonochemistry 2015-01, Vol.22, p.51-58 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •A method was developed for predicting the number of active bubbles in acoustical cavitation field.•The number of bubbles was determined using material balances for H2O2, OH and HO2.•The effect of ultrasonic frequency on the number of active bubbles was examined.•Increasing ultrasonic frequency leads to a substantial increase in the number of bubbles.
Knowledge of the number of active bubbles in acoustic cavitation field is very important for the prediction of the performance of ultrasonic reactors toward most chemical processes induced by ultrasound. The literature in this field is scarce, probably due to the complicated nature of the phenomena. We introduce here a relatively simple semi-empirical method for predicting the number of active bubbles in an acoustic cavitation field. By coupling the bubble dynamics in an acoustical field with chemical kinetics occurring in the bubble during oscillation, the amount of the radical species OH and HO2 and molecular H2O2 released by a single bubble was estimated. Knowing that the H2O2 measured experimentally during sonication of water comes from the recombination of hydroxyl (OH) and perhydroxyl (HO2) radicals in the liquid phase and assuming that in sonochemistry applications, the cavitation is transient and the bubble fragments at the first collapse, the number of bubbles formed per unit time per unit volume is then easily determined using material balances for H2O2, OH and HO2 in the liquid phase. The effect of ultrasonic frequency on the number of active bubbles was examined. It was shown that increasing ultrasonic frequency leads to a substantial increase in the number of bubbles formed in the reactor. |
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ISSN: | 1350-4177 1873-2828 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ultsonch.2014.07.015 |