Violent chemistry saps sonobubble energy. (Physics).Sound waves blasting a liquid can create a pulsating, microscopic bubble of gas so ferociously hot that it emits light and tears apart molecules as it collapses. In a controversial report last March, researchers offered evidence that such a so-called sonoluminescent bubble's implosion implosion /im·plo·sion/ (im-plo´zhun) see flooding. im·plo·sion n. 1. attains temperatures and pressures high enough to make atomic nuclei fuse together (SN: 3/9/02, p. 147). Now, the first experiment to directly measure the chemical-reaction rates in individual, sonolumineseent bubbles reveals that the recombining of atoms in a collapsing bubble probably limits its temperature. The new results seem to splash cold water on the fusion findings. Kenneth S. Suslick of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Early years: 1867-1880 The Morrill Act of 1862 granted each state in the United States a portion of land on which to establish a major public state university, one which could teach agriculture, mechanic arts, and military training, "without excluding other scientific was already skeptical of the March report's conclusions before conducting the chemical-reaction experiments, he says. "From our results, we find [the fusion] claims even more surprising." He and his Illinois colleague Yuri T. Didenko report the new measurements in the July 25 Nature. To investigate reaction rates within single air bubbles in water, Didenko and Suslick laced the water with molecules that glow under ultraviolet light Ultraviolet light A portion of the light spectrum not visible to the eye. Two bands of the UV spectrum, UVA and UVB, are used to treat psoriasis and other skin diseases. when bonded to compounds that form in the implosions. The glow's color identifies the chemicals, and its intensity indicates their abundances. The resulting chemical inventory revealed that a hundred times as much of a collapsing bubble's energy goes into chemical reactions This is the 18th episode of television drama Men in Trees. It originally aired on June 25, 2007 on the TV2 network in New Zealand as a continuation of season 1. Recap Marin and Cash have a stew cook off, she admits his is better than hers. as into light emissions. The new study "has nothing to do with bubble fusion," contends Richard T. Lahey Jr. of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, at Troy, N.Y.; coeducational; founded and opened 1824 as Rensselaer School; chartered 1826. It was called Rensselaer Institute from 1837 to 1861. in Troy, N.Y., who coauthored the March report. Bubbles in the acetone acetone (ăs`ĭtōn), dimethyl ketone (dīmĕth`əl kē`tōn), or 2-propanone (prō`pənōn), CH3COCH3 used in the fusion experiment collapsed too quickly for many chemical reactions to occur, he says. Suslick counters that because chemical dissociations occur in mere femtoseconds, reactions would have been well under way even in the acetone bubbles.--P.W. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion