Strong and fast rising pressure waves emitted by plasmonic vapor nanobubbles
Julien Lombard, Julien Lam, Francois Detcheverry, Thierry Biben and, Samy Merabia

TL;DR
This study reveals that plasmonic vapor nanobubbles emit strong, fast pressure waves during formation and rebound, which can cause localized damage and improve understanding of their applications in energy, imaging, and therapy.
Contribution
The paper introduces a phase-field model showing the existence of intense pressure waves emitted by nanobubbles, highlighting their potential for controlled damage and application optimization.
Findings
Pressure waves are emitted during nanobubble formation and rebound.
Waves propagate over micron distances in water.
Acoustic-mediated membrane perforation is more efficient than bubble expansion.
Abstract
Plasmonic vapour nanobubbles are currently considered for a wide variety of applications ranging from solar energy harvesting and photoacoustic imaging to nanoparticle-assisted cancer therapy. Yet, due their small size and unstable nature, their generation and consequences remain difficult to characterize. Here, building on a phase-field model, we report on the existence of strong pressure waves that are emitted when vapor nanobubbles first form around a laser-heated nanoparticle immersed in water, and subsequently after bubble rebound. These effects are strongest when the fluid is locally brought high in its supercritical state, which may be realized with a short laser pulse. Because of the highly out-of-equilibrium nature of nanobubble generation, the waves combine a high pressure peak with a fast pressure rising time, and propagate in water over micron distances, opening the way to…
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