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Investigation of SAW Atomization

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 16:18 authored by Aisha Qi, James Friend, Leslie YeoLeslie Yeo
Surface acoustic wave atomization is promising in various kinds of industrial and pharmaceutical processes. In order to properly apply this technology for a wide range of applications, controlling the aerosol size distribution is crucial. It is widely believed that the aerosol size can be controlled by the driving frequency, our experimental results, show a rather weak frequency dependence, especially when the driving frequency is above 10 MHz. Fundamental studies were therefore carried out to determine the underlying mechanism associated with the destabilization of the liquid interface leading towards atomization with the objective of elucidating this apparent contradiction. Our investigation supports the notion that the droplet sizes appear to be governed by the capillary vibration frequency given by a balance between the capillary stress and viscous forcing, not the driving frequency as previously claimed. Furthermore, the aerosol size can be altered by controlling the surface tension and viscosity. For this case, we employ the laser diffraction to obtain the size distributions of octanol aerosol and water aerosol generated by SAW atomization. The experimental results matches our theocratical prediction that water, with higher surface tension and lower viscosity, generates relatively larger aerosols than octanol

History

Start page

787

End page

790

Total pages

4

Outlet

Proceedings IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium

Name of conference

IEEE International Ultrasonics Symposium Proceedings

Publisher

IEEE

Place published

United States

Start date

2009-09-20

End date

2009-09-23

Language

English

Copyright

© 2009 IEEE

Former Identifier

2006031987

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-05-11

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