航空学院青年学术论坛第143讲--荷兰特文特大学Michel Versluis教授

发布日期:2019年04月25日      点击:次  |   审核:航空学院

间:2019年4月29日(星期一)10:00-11:00

点:航空楼A706

人:荷兰特文特大学 Michel Versluis教授

郗恒东教授

报 告 题目:Bubbles and droplets for nanotechnology and nanomedicine

报告人简介:

Prof. Dr. Andreas Michael Versluis is a full professor at University of Twente and the Fellow of the Acoustical Society of America. His research interests lie in the area of physical and medical acoustic, particularly interested in the use of microbubbles and microdroplets for medical applications, both in imaging and in therapy, and in the physics and control of bubbles and droplets in microfluidic applications for medicine and for nanotechnology industry. He has published 178 papers on Nature, Science, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci, Physical Review Letters, Nature Commun, J. Fluid Mech, Langmuir, Lab on a Chip etc. The total citation of his publications is over 5800 times (till Jan 2019) and his current h-index is 41. He is also the reviewer for manuscripts of many famous international journals like Physical Review Letters, Nature Commun, J. Fluid Mech, Langmuir, Lab on a Chip, Applied Physics Letters, Physical Review E.

报告摘要:

The acoustic excitation of bubbles and droplets has widespread use in medical technology and nanotechnology applications. These applications include bulk and surface acoustic waves for bubble and droplet production, as well as bubble and droplet actuation to perform local drug delivery or local and well-controlled surface cleaning. For example, the controlled jet breakup of droplets can be accelerated through the resonant acoustic excitation of instable modes on the jet to form monodisperse droplets at a uniform production rate. Beat frequencies can be exploited to form larger droplet constructs through well-controlled coalescence in flight to be used to efficiently generate extreme ultraviolet wavelengths for the next generation nanolithography technology. Acoustically driven bubbles can promote efficient mixing on the microscale through acoustic streaming and stable cavitation. Microbubbles and low-boiling point nanodroplets can also be decorated with a payload which carries great potential for their use as drug delivery agents in the context of personalized medical therapy. Key to all these emerging applications is a precise acoustic control of the interaction of ultrasound with the bubbles and droplets. The challenge here is the combined microscopic length scales and ultrashort time scales associated with the mechanisms controlling bubble and droplet formation and its activation processes, which we solve by high-resolution ultrafast microscopy, even down to the nanosecond. Together with theoretical modeling and numerical simulations these experiments assist in our in-depth fundamental understanding of bubble and droplet behavior, which then provides intriguing new prospects for innovative solutions in nanotechnology industry and in nanomedicine.

 

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