Acoustic-Driven Surface Cleaning with Millimeter-Sized Bubbles at Translational Resonance
Yan Jun Lin, Zhengyang Liu, Sunghwan Jung

TL;DR
This paper explores acoustic-driven cleaning using millimeter-sized bubbles at their translational resonance, demonstrating significantly improved cleaning efficiency through resonance-induced bubble motion, offering a sustainable alternative to traditional methods.
Contribution
It identifies and characterizes a novel translational resonance in millimeter-sized bubbles and demonstrates its effectiveness in enhancing surface cleaning performance.
Findings
Translational resonance occurs at much lower frequencies than Minnaert resonance.
Resonant bubbles show amplified lateral swaying and stop-and-go dynamics.
Cleaning efficacy improves by approximately 90% at resonance.
Abstract
Traditional surface cleaning methods often suffer from drawbacks such as chemical harshness, potential for surface damage, and high energy consumption. This study investigates an alternative approach: acoustic-driven surface cleaning using millimeter-sized bubbles excited at low, sub-cavitation frequencies. We identify and characterize a distinct translational resonance of these bubbles, occurring at significantly lower frequencies (e.g., 50 Hz for 1.3 mm diameter bubbles) than the Minnaert resonance for a bubble of the same size. Experiments reveal that at this translational resonance, stationary bubbles exhibit amplified lateral swaying, while bubbles sliding on an inclined surface display pronounced "stop-and-go" dynamics. The theoretical model treats the bubble as a forced, damped harmonic oscillator, where surface tension provides the restoring force and the inertia is dominated by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUltrasound and Cavitation Phenomena · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Ultrasound and Hyperthermia Applications
