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In situ measurement of cavitation damage from single bubble collapse using high-speed chronoamperometry
Affiliation:1. Department of Metallurgy and Materials Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Kashan, Kashan, Iran;2. Materials Science and Engineering, Institute for Metal Technologies, University Duisburg-Essen, 47057 Duisburg, Germany;3. Department Soft Matter, Institute for Physics, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg, Universitätsplatz 2, 39106 Magdeburg, Germany
Abstract:We quantitatively study cavitation damage non-invasively, in-place and time-resolved at microsecond resolution. A single, laser-induced bubble is generated in an aqueous NaCl solution close to the surface of an aluminum sample. High-speed chronoamperometry is used to record the corrosion current flowing between the sample and an identical aluminum electrode immersed in the same solution. This configuration makes it possible to measure the cavitation damage in the nanometer thin passive layer of the aluminum surface via the corrosion current from the repassivation. Synchronously with the corrosion current, the bubble dynamics is recorded via high-speed imaging. Correlation between the two measurements allows contributing cavitation damage to the respective stages of the bubble dynamics. The largest cavitation-induced currents were observed for the smallest initial bubble-to-surface stand-off distances. As the bubble re-expands and collapses again in several stages, further current peaks were detected implying a sequence of smaller damage. At intermediate stand-offs, the bubble was not damaging and at large stand-off distances, the bubble was only damaging during the second collapse which again occurs at the solid surface.
Keywords:Cavitation  Corrosion  Erosion  Chronoamperometry  Bubble Dynamics
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