- Whenever ambient pressure is reduced, the boiling point of a liquid is also lowered. If the pressure is reduced far enough then the liquid will begin to boil without needing to be heated (because the boiling point is reduced to below room temperature).
- When this happens on a small scale; due to localised pressure reduction, small bubbles of vapour are formed - this is called cavitation.
- It can happen in a liquid subjected to ultrasonic vibrations or in other circumstances where movement creates areas of low pressure (e.g. ship's propellers).
- Most of the effects are caused not by the formation of vapour bubbles but by their destruction.
- The low-pressure areas are highly localised and changing all the time (for an ultrasonic standing wave the time between lowest and highest pressure is typically 10 to 25 microseconds).
- The bubbles can exist only when the pressure is low - they are extremely unstable when it is high so they collapse violently, momentarily creating immense temperatures and pressures.
- Of course, the collapse of each bubble happens in a microscopically small volume but given a strong, uniform ultrasonic field millions of them throughout the liquid will be formed and destroyed thousands of times per second, so they can affect the bulk properties of the liquid.
The physical phenomenon of cavitation finds applications in:
- The effect is used to homogenizer colloidal liquid compounds such as milk or paints. This area of application is called sonochemistry.
- A controlled acoustic cavitation in a cleaning fluid picks up microscopic dirt particles away so that they do not reattach to the material cleaned. This application is called ultrasonic cleaning.