Theoretical study of time-dependent, ultrasound-induced acoustic streaming in microchannels

Peter Barkholt Muller and Henrik Bruus
Phys. Rev. E 92, 063018 – Published 18 December 2015
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Abstract

Based on first- and second-order perturbation theory, we present a numerical study of the temporal buildup and decay of unsteady acoustic fields and acoustic streaming flows actuated by vibrating walls in the transverse cross-sectional plane of a long straight microchannel under adiabatic conditions and assuming temperature-independent material parameters. The unsteady streaming flow is obtained by averaging the time-dependent velocity field over one oscillation period, and as time increases, it is shown to converge towards the well-known steady time-averaged solution calculated in the frequency domain. Scaling analysis reveals that the acoustic resonance builds up much faster than the acoustic streaming, implying that the radiation force may dominate over the drag force from streaming even for small particles. However, our numerical time-dependent analysis indicates that pulsed actuation does not reduce streaming significantly due to its slow decay. Our analysis also shows that for an acoustic resonance with a quality factor Q, the amplitude of the oscillating second-order velocity component is Q times larger than the usual second-order steady time-averaged velocity component. Consequently, the well-known criterion v1cs for the validity of the perturbation expansion is replaced by the more restrictive criterion v1cs/Q. Our numerical model is available as supplemental material in the form of comsol model files and matlab scripts.

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  • Received 8 September 2015

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.92.063018

©2015 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Peter Barkholt Muller* and Henrik Bruus

  • Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark, DTU Physics Building 309, DK-2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

  • *peter.b.muller@gmail.com
  • bruus@fysik.dtu.dk

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Issue

Vol. 92, Iss. 6 — December 2015

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