Issue 25, 2018

A small-angle scattering environment for in situ ultrasound studies

Abstract

Ultrasonic devices are common tools in laboratory and industrial settings to produce cavitation events for cleaning, emulsification, cell lysis and other materials applications. Effects of sonication at the macroscopic scale can be visible while effects at the molecular and nano-scales are not easily probed and, therefore, not fully understood. We present a new small angle scattering sample environment designed specifically to study structural changes occurring in various types of dispersions at the nano-scale due to ultrasonic acoustic waves. The sample environment features two face-to-face high-intensity focused ultrasound transducers coaxially aligned and normal to the neutron/X-ray beam propagation direction. A third broadband transducer is fixed beneath the scattering volume to acoustically monitor for cavitation events. By correlating acoustic data to scattering data, measured structural changes can be correlated to changes in parameters such as frequency, acoustic pressure, or cavitation pressure threshold. Several example applications of colloidal systems effectively influenced by ultrasound fields are also presented to demonstrate the capabilities of the device and to motivate future work on in situ scattering analysis of ultrasound materials processing methods.

Graphical abstract: A small-angle scattering environment for in situ ultrasound studies

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 May 2018
Accepted
05 Jun 2018
First published
05 Jun 2018

Soft Matter, 2018,14, 5283-5293

Author version available

A small-angle scattering environment for in situ ultrasound studies

D. S. Li, Y. Lee, Y. Xi, I. Pelivanov, M. O’Donnell and L. D. Pozzo, Soft Matter, 2018, 14, 5283 DOI: 10.1039/C8SM01000E

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