Clustering dynamics of microbubbles exposed to low-pressure 1-MHz ultrasound

2017 
Ultrasound-driven microbubbles have been used in therapeutic applications to deliver drugs across capillaries and into cells or to dissolve blood clots. Yet the performance and safety of these applications have been difficult to control. Microbubbles exposed to ultrasound not only volumetrically oscillate, but also move due to acoustic radiation, or Bjerknes, forces. The purpose of this work was to understand the extent to which microbubbles moved and clustered due to secondary Bjerknes forces. A microbubble population was exposed to a 1-MHz ultrasound pulse with a peak-rarefactional pressure of 50–100 kPa and a pulse length of 20 ms. Microbubbles exposed to low-pressure therapeutic ultrasound were observed to cluster at clustering rates of 0.01–0.02 microbubbles per duration (in ms) per initial average inter-bubble distance (in μm), resulting in 1 to 3 clustered microbubbles per initial average inter-bubble distance (in μm). Higher pressures caused faster clustering rates and a larger number of clustered...
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