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Published November 18, 2016 | public
Conference Paper

Modeling and experimental analysis of acoustic cavitation bubble clouds for burst-wave lithotripsy

Abstract

Understanding the dynamics of cavitation bubble clouds formed inside a human body is critical for the design of burst-wave lithotripsy (BWL), a newly proposed method that uses focused ultrasound pulses with amplitude of O(10) MPa and frequency of O(0.1) MHz to fragment kidney stones. We present modeling and three-dimensional direct numerical simulations of interactions between bubble clouds and ultrasound pulses in water. We study two configurations: isolated clouds in a free field, and clouds near a rigid surface. In the modeling, we solve for the bubble radius evolution and continuous flow field using a WENO-based compressible flow solver. In the solver, Lagrangian bubbles are coupled with the continuous phase, defined on an Eulerian grid, at the sub-grid scale using volume averaging techniques. Correlations between the initial void fraction and the maximum collapse pressure in the cloud are discussed. We demonstrate acoustic imaging of the bubbles by post-processing simulated pressure signals at particular sensor locations indicating waves scattered by the clouds. Finally, we compare the simulation results with experimental results including high-speed imaging and hydrophone measurements. The time evolution of the cloud void fraction and the scattered acoustic field in the simulation agree with the experimental results.

Additional Information

© Acoustical Society of America. Published Online: 18 November 2016. Funding supported by NIH 2P01-DK043881.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023