4.6 Article

An electrochemical and high-speed imaging study of micropore decontamination by acoustic bubble entrapment

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 4982-4989

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3cp55088e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/D05849X/1]
  2. Royal Society Brian Mercer Award
  3. DSTL
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/D05849X/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Electrochemical and high-speed imaging techniques are used to study the abilities of ultrasonically-activated bubbles to clean out micropores. Cylindrical pores with dimensions (diameter x depth) of 500 mu m x 400 mu m (aspect ratio 0.8), 125 mu m x 350 mu m (aspect ratio 2.8) and 50 mu m x 200 mu m (aspect ratio 4.0) are fabricated in glass substrates. Each pore is contaminated by filling it with an electrochemically inactive blocking organic material (thickened methyl salicylate) before the substrate is placed in a solution containing an electroactive species (Fe(CN)(6)(3)). An electrode is fabricated at the base of each pore and the Faradaic current is used to monitor the decontamination as a function of time. For the largest pore, decontamination driven by ultrasound (generated by a horn type transducer) and bulk fluid flow are compared. It is shown that ultrasound is much more effective than flow alone, and that bulk fluid flow at the rates used cannot decontaminate the pore completely, but that ultrasound can. In the case of the 125 mu m pore, high-speed imaging is used to elucidate the cleaning mechanisms involved in ultrasonic decontamination and reveals that acoustic bubble entrapment is a key feature. The smallest pore is used to explore the limits of decontamination and it is found that ultrasound is still effective at this size under the conditions employed.

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