home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1993-01-03 | 88.3 KB | 1,667 lines |
- Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!sh.wide!wnoc-tyo-news!nec-tyo!nec-gw!netkeeper!vivaldi!aslws01!aslss01!terry
- From: terry@asl.dl.nec.com
- Subject: Ultra Cavitation
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.043411.2231@asl.dl.nec.com>
- Originator: terry@aslss01
- Sender: news@asl.dl.nec.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: aslss01
- Organization: (Speaking only for myself)
- Date: Sun, 3 Jan 1993 04:34:11 GMT
- Lines: 1654
-
-
- --------- Copyrighted document begins with (and includes) this line ----------
-
-
- ULTRA CAVITATION
-
- -- An Outline of Theoretical and Experimental Issues --
-
- December 31, 1992
- Version 1.0
-
- Terry B. Bollinger
- 2416 Branch Oaks Lane
- Flower Mound, Texas 75028
-
-
- Copyright 1993 by Terry B. Bollinger.
- Unlimited rights to duplicate in any
- form, provided only that the document
- and its copyright notice are copied
- in their entirety. Properly attributed
- short quotes are also fine.
-
-
- -- DOCUMENT UPDATE HISTORY --
-
- AUTHOR DATE ACTION
- ---------------------- ---------- ----------------------------------
- Terry B. Bollinger 1992-12-20 Initial outline completed
- Terry B. Bollinger 1993-01-02 Version 1.0 completed and released
-
-
- 1. INTRODUCTION
-
- The purpose of this document is to further explore a number of issues related
- to how cavitation in a fluid may be capable of generating extraordinarily
- high pressures and temperatures that are well beyond the range normally
- assumed possible with cavitation. I refer to this idea of an extended range
- of cavitation phenomena as "ultra cavitation." Ultra cavitation is proposed
- to be quantitatively different from ordinary cavitation through its use of a
- "wedge-out" mechanism to accelerate a fraction of the imploding molecules to
- much higher velocities that are possible in ordinary cavitation. For this
- acceleration effect to apply, the interior of the ultra cavitation void must
- contain an extremely hard vacuum, and the surface of the void must maintain a
- very high degree of spherical symmetry throughout the collapse process.
-
- This exploration is an extension of the ideas the author first proposed in
- Network references [1] and [2]. The issue of cavitation and whether or not
- it could induce exceptionally energetic events was first brought to my
- attention by Cameron Randale Bass (crb7q@kelvin.seas.Virginia.EDU) in a
- private email, and my interest was further increased by some intriguing
- recent data on cavitation results that were provided by Steven E. Jones in
- Network references [3] and [4]
-
- The style of this document is to provide a broad framework and exploration of
- theoretical and experimental issues, rather than a rigorous mathematical
- analysis of the relative importance of many of the effects described. The
- style of exploration is perhaps more characteristic more of computer science
- than physics, since it emphasizes identification of key abstractions ("what
- really makes cavitation work?") followed by exploration of a broad range of
- potential theoretical and experimental "free parameters." The next step is
- "implementation," or expansion of the concepts and relationships described
- here into specific mathematical formula and numerical analysis methods.
-
- It is my hope that by publishing the outline as quickly as possible, others
- on the Net will be able to contribute to directly to the quantification of
- the framework I am proposing below. Also, I think it would be worth looking
- at the possibility of synthesizing contributions into a multi-author paper
- for submission to a conventional physics journal, so that slow-mail readers
- will have easier access to such Network results.
-
- My overall conclusion is that cavitation is an extraordinarily complex and
- rich phenomenon. Based on early reports of cavitation energies corresponding
- to 100,000 degrees with comparatively simple setups [3], I would judge it to
- be highly probably that significant, detectable increases in the rates of T-T
- and possibly D-T reactions should be possible using advanced cavitation
- methods. Details of such reactions will require further experimental and
- (especially) numeric simulation work to be validated and studied in detail.
-
-
- 2. FUNDAMENTALS OF VOID FORMATION
-
- Cavitation consists of two major steps: void formation, and void collapse or
- implosion. This section looks at void formation.
-
- 2.1 VOIDS IN GASES AND LIQUIDS
-
- The initial step in cavitation is the formation of a vacuum bubble (void)
- within a gas or liquid. Both gas and liquid voids are inherently unstable.
- Gas voids will quickly be filled through simple diffusion, while liquid voids
- will close because of surface tension in the void surface and (if present)
- internal fluid pressure.
-
- Of the two types, liquid voids are significantly more interesting due to the
- special properties of well-defined void surfaces. Sharply delineated void
- surfaces that exhibit surface tension drastically alter the dynamics of void
- collapse, generally by making them far more intense than gas void closures.
- Apart from this key difference, the dynamics of gas voids should be largely a
- subset of the dynamics liquid voids. Thus in this paper gas voids will be
- discussed only as they relate to the behavior of liquid voids.
-
- 2.2 INTRA-LIQUID BONDS
-
- All liquids possess cohesive intra-liquid forces that hold the fluid together
- even in the presence of a vacuum. At the molecular level these cohesive
- forces translate into inter-molecular and inter-atomic bonds that range over
- many orders of magnitude in strength, from the exceedingly weak Van der Waals
- forces that provide liquid helium with cohesion to the very strong ionic,
- metallic, and covalent bonds that are characteristic of most high-temperature
- fluids. Hydrogen bonding, which allows the very light constituents of water
- to exist in liquid form at room temperature, is an example of a intra-fluid
- bonding mechanism of intermediate strength. Intra-liquid bonds also vary
- greatly in relative mobility, or the ease with which molecules or atoms can
- "slip around" each other to form new bonds. Van der Waals bonds and hydrogen
- bonds in water are examples of highly mobile intra-fluid bonds, while the
- largely covalent bonds of high-temperature liquids such as molten silica are
- both highly directional and difficult to rearrange rapidly.
-
- 2.3 EXPLOSIVE VOID FORMATION
-
- To form a void in liquid, it will be necessary to both to break and to
- rapidly rearrange intra-fluid bonds to form a nanovoid, and to then expand
- the nanovoid by rapidly accelerating its walls outward from the point of
- origin. There are two primary mechanisms for driving this outward
- expansion: explosive void formation, and decompressive void formation. (A
- third possibility of very rapid removal of an object from a fluid is similar
- enough to decompressive void formation that it will not be treated separately
- here.)
-
- In explosive void formation, a void is created in a liquid (or gas) by a tiny
- but intense explosion within the liquid. Such an explosion drives away the
- liquid with very high momentum gases (possibly the vaporized liquid itself),
- thus leaving a region of relative vacuum.
-
- Explosive void formation is limited in several ways. Firstly, the energy
- needed to enlarge the void increases rapidly with increasing void size, since
- the explosion must "push" increasingly large volumes of fluid outward as the
- radius of the void expands. Secondly, the vacuum formed my such a explosive
- methods will necessarily be imperfect for two reasons: the early stages of
- the micro-explosion are likely to vaporize much of the fluid around it, and
- most micro-explosive mechanisms are likely to leave behind a residue of gases
- or other products.
-
- Ironically, the most practical approach to creating the necessary minuscule
- explosions for explosive void formation is through implosion of decompression
- voids. That is, the rebound effect of void collapse can be energetic enough
- and sufficiently point-like to lead to secondary (explosive) void formation.
- Such secondary voids will in general be smaller than the voids that produced
- them, but if the original implosion is exothermic (e.g., if it resulted in
- the recombination of dissolved hydrogen and oxygen in the fluid), secondary
- voids could in some cases be as large as or larger than the original voids.
-
- This paper will in general assume that voids are created via decompression,
- not explosion. Explosive void formation will be discussed only as it is
- relevant to the aftermath of decompressive void implosions.
-
- 2.4 DECOMPRESSIVE VOID FORMATION
-
- In decompressive void formation, a void is formed literally by "stretching"
- the liquid (that is, forcing it to increase in total volume) until nanovoids
- present in the fluid undergo exponential expansion and become macroscopic.
-
- In contrast to explosive void formation, decompressive void formation tends
- to produce clean voids that can be expanded to arbitrarily large size,
- without requiring the addition of large quantities of a foreign explosive
- materials into the void region. Also, since the events surrounding the
- rupture and subsequent rearrangement of intra-fluid bonds are relatively low
- energy at the rupture point, less of the fluid is likely to be vaporized
- during the early stages of void formation. In fact, if the fluid possesses
- sufficiently strong intra-fluid bonding, it should be possible to arrange
- decompressive void formation so that extremely few (possibly zero) molecules
- of liquid will enter into the void.
-
- Voids of quite large size can be formed by decompression, since a
- sufficiently rapid and symmetrical decompression cycle will allow them to
- grow in size until the surrounding fluid either breaks up or physically can
- no longer contain them. However, once the dynamic forces of decompression
- are removed, the resulting voids will necessarily become unstable due the
- effects of surface tension at the void surface, even in the absence of
- internal fluid pressure. (The effects of surface tension are discussed
- further in the Section 3.XX discussion of symmetry enhancement, and in the
- Section 3.XX discussion of the early stages of void implosion.)
-
- 2.4.1 Impulse Decompression (and Void Formation in Nature)
-
- Mechanically, decompressive voids can be created by something as simple as an
- abrupt pull on a piston in a cylinder that contains a low-gas liquid. Note
- that the liquid must "wet" or bond tightly to the piston and cylinder surface
- if the void is to form in the interior of the fluid; weak bonding to the
- surrounding surfaces will simply result in voiding formation at the junction
- between the cylinder/piston and the fluid.
-
- This concept of impulse decompression is sufficiently simple that it is quite
- likely to occur naturally. For example, one possible scenario for natural
- formation of impulse decompression voids would be the sudden "snapping" of a
- fluid-filled crack in a rock. Because a sufficiently sudden break in the
- rock would not allow enough time for fluid to fill the crack, void formation
- would be a likely consequence.
-
- 2.4.2 "Flow Shadow" Decompression
-
- Another mechanism that can be used to generate decompressive voids is the
- very rapid flow of a fluid around a "shadow object." If the flow is rapid
- enough, and the if the trailing side of the object cuts off abruptly enough
- to make laminar or even ordinary turbulent flow impossible, the result will
- be the formation of a large "void shadow" that continually breaks up and
- enters into the fluid flow voids of various sizes. Using very-high-velocity
- water, this technique has been studied as a method for drilling into solid
- rock using the impact of the imploding voids [5].
-
- Flow shadowing could perhaps exist in nature, but is less likely due the need
- for very high fluid velocities in an environment free of gases. Nonetheless,
- the existence of high-velocity "black smoker" vents at some mid oceanic
- ridges provides a simple example of how surprisingly rapid velocities can
- develop within natural fluids. (To be of interest from a cavitation
- perspective, such rapid flows would of course also need to meet the
- additional requirement of having low dissolved contents, which is in general
- not the case for such "black smokers" with their high hydrogen sulphide
- content.)
-
- 2.4.3 Sonic Decompression
-
- For general applications, the most common decompression void formation
- technique is to use intense sound waves, generally (but not necessarily) in
- the ultrasonic range. Since sound waves are composed of traveling regions of
- high and low pressure, sufficiently powerful sound waves provide a good
- technique for rapidly and cyclically producing regions of sufficiently high
- stress to cause fluid rupture around a transient defect or a point defect.
- Sound has the additional advantage of providing compression cycles shortly
- after the formation of a void.
-
- Transient sonic cavitation in nature is clearly possible in any circumstances
- where sharp, intense sounds are generated in fluids by natural phenomena.
-
- Two major types of sonic decompression should be distinguished:
-
- 1) Traveling-wave decompression, and
-
- 2) Standing-wave decompression
-
- Traveling waves are conventional sound waves in which the decompression
- region moves at the speed of sound. Although the can cause cavitation, they
- are of secondary interest here because voids formed by this method will tend
- to be "pulled along" by the traveling wave. This "pulling" effect will tend
- both to distort the shape of the void axially and cause the void to collapse
- over an extended period of time, rather than as a single brief collapse event.
-
- Standing wave decompression, which is usually achieve by reflecting the
- initial traveling wave back on itself, is far more interesting from the
- perspective of creating high-quality, high-symmetry voids. In standing-wave
- decompression the regions of decompression stay "in place", and furthermore
- can be shaped to relatively high levels of symmetry by the use of complex
- combinations of reflection and wave interference. Finally, standing-wave
- decompression permits the formation of "lattices" of similar decompression
- regions that can be used to create large numbers of highly similar voids.
-
-
- 3. THE CAVITATION PROCESS
-
- In this section the cavitation process is analyzed with the objective of
- identifying parameters that are likely to influence peak implosion pressures
- and temperatures. Cavitation is described in terms of the following phases:
-
- 1) Void Initiation (Section 3.1)
-
- 2) Accelerated Expansion (Section 3.2)
-
- 3) Inertial Overshoot (Section 3.3)
-
- 4) Restructuring of Void Surface (Section 3.4)
-
- 5) Implosion Initiation (Section 3.5)
-
- 6) Early Implosion (Section 3.6)
-
- 7) Mid Implosion (Section 3.7)
-
- 8) Late Implosion (Section 3.8)
-
- 9) Implosion Termination (Section 3.9)
-
- 10) Region of Maximum Energy (Section 3.10)
-
- 11) Post-Implosion Rebound (Section 3.11)
-
-
- 3.1 VOID INITIATION
-
- The earliest identifiable stage in void formation is to create a macroscopic
- region in a liquid for which the average intra-liquid bond length is somewhat
- larger than normal. This elastic stretching of molecule-to-molecule bonds in
- the region then provides the necessary potential energy for the formation of
- a void.
-
- If the stretched bonds of the liquid region are viewed as an elastic
- "fabric", then void formation is simply the release of their potential energy
- through the rapid growth of a "hole" somewhere in the fabric. Just as
- pricking a balloon with a pin results in a (catastrophically) rapid expansion
- of the hole to release energy in the stretched fabric of the balloon, a "pin
- prick" in a (considerably less) stretched liquid will result in the rapid
- formation of a void that permits intra-liquid bonding lengths to return to
- normal.
-
- (It should be noted that in the case of an extremely pure liquid, it may be
- possible for such a stretched state to remain stable for long lengths of
- time. This "superstretched" liquid state would be a close analog of a liquid
- superheated and supercooled states. I do not know if this concept has ever
- been explored experimentally.)
-
- Borrowing the analogy of the balloon, what exactly would be the nature of the
- "pin prick" (nanovoid) that would lead to rapid release of the potential
- energy of intra-liquid bond stretching?
-
- There are two possible answers:
-
- 1) Statistical Nanovoids. Fluctuations at the molecular level should be
- capable of forming "nanovoids," or extremely tiny (Angstrom range),
- very short lived voids. If the stress on the fabric of the liquid is
- very severe, amplification of these statistical nanovoids may be
- possible.
-
- 2) Void Seeds. As implied by the name, void seeds are small to
- extremely small imperfections in the "fabric" of the stretched
- liquid. They could be foreign bodies ranging in size from dust
- particles to single molecules, or the could be energy events such the
- passage of ionizing radiation. A void seed forms a nanovoid when
- bonding of the fluid to the void seed fails and a vacuum region forms
- around the seed.
-
- Except for extremely pure liquids preserved under careful conditions, the
- most likely source of nanovoids will be void seeds, since the initial energy
- required to expand around a statistical nanovoid will be so high that it will
- tend to be self-equalizing -- that is, the pull of adjacent fluid molecules
- on the surface of a statistical nanovoid will be near the limit of what the
- fluid can handle, so that rather than expanding the nanovoid might simply
- shift to or be recreated in a new position. This means that the level of
- strain on the intra-fluid bonds will be so high that amplification of a
- statistical nanovoid will be more likely to cause a general explosion of the
- liquid than it is to cause void formation.
-
- Void seeding, however inadvertent, therefore will be assumed to be the normal
- mechanism by which decompressive void formation is initiated.
-
- 3.2 ACCELERATED EXPANSION
-
- 3.2.1 Conversion of Bond Potential Energy into Void Potential Energy
-
- The next phase of void formation is expansion, in which the potential energy
- of the stretched intra-liquid bonds is rapidly converted into a general
- acceleration away from the initial nanovoid. This acceleration will be the
- most rapid at the surface of he nanovoid, and will fall off linearly away
- from the surface until at some point it reaches zero. The closed surface
- defined by all of these zero acceleration points will be called the Zero
- Acceleration Surface (ZAS), and the volume of liquid enclosed by it will be
- referred to as the ZAS cell for the void.
-
- The ZAS cell contains the total volume of liquid that will contribute its
- potential (tension) bond energy to the formation of the void. Thus if the
- size of the ZAS cell and the potential energy profile of the liquid within it
- are both known, this information can be used to calculate the maximum total
- energy available for forming the void. There will be some loss of the bond
- potential energy due to heating, but in general a high percentage of the
- total bond energy in the ZAS cell should be converted into a new form of void
- potential energy that will be released when the void collapses.
-
- In a generally decompressed fluid in which multiple voids are formed at the
- same time, a ZAS "cell structure" of zero acceleration surfaces will be
- formed in the fluid, with a void at the center of each ZAS cell. In the case
- of sonic decompression the region that contributes to a single void will be
- defined by the form of decompression regions of the standing waves, with ZAS
- cells separated by distinct regions of sonic compression.
-
- Although in this paper the ZAS cell will generally be discussed as if it were
- a stable, unchanging volume in the fluid, a more realistic model must take
- into account the fact that the ZAS cell may shrink or expand if the ambient
- pressure changes during void expansion or collapse.
-
- 3.2.2 Release of Dissolved Gases Into Decompressive Voids
-
- An important side effect of void expansion is the release of dissolved gases
- into the growing void. This is in part due simply to the natural tendency of
- a liquid to de-gas into any hard vacuum with which it comes into contact, but
- it is also due to the dynamic, non-equilibrium nature of the void surface
- during expansion. Because the void surface is rapidly "stretched" as it
- expands, normal lateral surface bonding at the surface of the liquid will be
- severely stressed. This in turn means that the normally higher density of
- the fluid surface may be largely or entirely lost, especially during the
- early stages of decompression, and that this resulting "porous" surface will
- not be able to inhibit the passage of dissolved gases as efficiently as a
- normal fluid surface. (This argument does not apply to explosively formed
- voids, since during expansion their void surfaces will be compressed rather
- than expanded.)
-
- Also, the rapid expansion of the void during decompression will in effect
- "sweep" a large volume of liquid into close proximity with the void surface.
- This again will encourage release of dissolved gases into the void,
- especially in combination with the increased porosity of the surface during
- expansion.
-
- The idea that decompression voids should act as effective gas "sweepers" is
- demonstrated by the use of ultrasonic cavitation to degas liquids [6]. As
- will be discussed later, the tendency for voids to sweep up dissolved gases
- during expansion has considerable significance for the mid and late phases of
- void implosion.
-
- For a reasonably symmetrical void, the accelerated expansion phase of void
- formation ends when average bond lengths in within the zero-acceleration
- surface have returned to normal (non-stressed) lengths. However, because the
- particles near the void surface have appreciable mass, the void will continue
- to grow for a short period after the zero-acceleration point. This overshoot
- effect is described in the next section.
-
- 3.3 INERTIAL OVERSHOOT
-
- When the average bond length within the ZAS cell has reached normal values,
- ZAS cell bond potential energy will have been converted primarily into three
- new forms:
-
- 1) Kinetic energy (outward motion of liquid)
-
- 2) Tension in void surface
-
- 3) Dissipative heat
-
- Dissipative heat during expansion should be relatively minor if the void is
- highly symmetrical, and should impact void collapse only through the indirect
- effect of possibly producing some heating of the liquid around the void.
-
- The role of tension in the void surface can be best understood by realizing
- that during the very early expansion of the nanovoid the dominant force that
- must be overcome is not the inertia of the liquid, but the highly resistive
- effects of surface tension in very small voids. Just as blowing up a very
- small balloon requires far more force than adding the same volume of air to a
- balloon that has already been expanded to a large size, the energetic role of
- this "stretching" of the nanovoid surface will be dominant while the void is
- sufficiently small in size. For a very large void the dominant force
- resisting further expansion will become the inertial of the liquid, rather
- than the surface tension of the void. An accurate mathematical model of the
- conversion of ZAS cell bond potential energy into void energy thus must take
- the forces of surface tension carefully into account, especially for models
- of the earliest stages of void expansion.
-
- Kinetic energy will consist of an (ideally) linear outward-bound velocity
- profile that has its highest value at the void surface, and reaches zero at
- the ZAS.
-
- It is the kinetic energy component of the newly formed void that will lead to
- overshoot and further enlargement of the void. This kinetic energy will be
- converted rapidly into compression of (momentarily) normal-average-length
- intra-fluid bonds within the ZAS cell. For the ideally linear acceleration
- profile of a line drawn from the void surface to the ZAS, this new
- compressive potential energy should be stored uniformly throughout the fluid
- of the ZAS cell.
-
- The overshoot phase will end when all of the kinetic energy of the ZAS cell
- has been converted over to compressive bond energy. Since this is the point
- at which all of the outward bound kinetic energy has been exhausted, it will
- also be the same point at which the void encloses its maximum volume.
-
- Another effect over overshoot compression is "closure" of void surface, which
- was more porous than normal during the rapid expansion phase. By the time
- the void has reached its maximum volume, the void should have a fairly normal
- (or actually compressed) liquid surface that exhibits higher density and
- greater cohesiveness than the volume fluid.
-
- 3.4 RESTRUCTURING OF VOID SURFACE
-
- 3.4.1 Surface Tension
-
- Surface tension now begins to play a significant role in the maximum-volume
- void. Surface tension may be roughly understood as a lateral and downward
- (into the fluid) "re-alignment" of intra-fluid bonds that otherwise would
- have gone to bonding with the "missing" fluid. A molecule at the surface of
- a liquid thus will bond more tightly (and physically more closely) with the
- fluid molecules around and below it, giving the net effect of an elastic
- membrane that tends both to compress the underlying fluid and to resist
- stretching. This elastic-membrane analogy helps provide a general idea of
- how such surfaces will behave.
-
- It should be noted that if surface tension is a consequence of "re-alignment"
- of intra-fluid bonds, the fluids that will tend to have the strongest surface
- tensions will be those that have intra-fluid bonds that are both very strong
- and easily re-aligned. Many liquid metals provides examples of such strong
- surface tension, since metallic bonding is both strong and generally easy to
- re-align. Hydrogen bonding also meets these criterion well, at least in the
- case of water.
-
- In general, the smaller the radius of a displacement of a liquid surface is,
- the stronger the accelerating "displacement removal" force per molecule will
- be. A single molecule displaced slightly above the surface will be subject
- to a very strong accelerating force consisting of its own bonding forces
- trying to return it to body of the fluid, while for larger and larger
- displacements of fluid this accelerating force will be distributed out over
- increasingly large numbers of molecules. Very large displacements thus will
- be subject only to modest accelerations, and may be overcome by other forces
- that could (for example) tend to break up the surface structure into droplets
- or bubbles.
-
- In general, these accelerating effects of surface tension thus will tend to
- simplify the equations that describe the curvature of the liquid surface,
- with very small radii of displacement being subject to very high, short-
- duration accelerating forces, and large radii displacements being subject to
- much lower accelerations over more extended periods of time. This range of
- accelerations over a wide scale of sizes helps produce the common liquid
- effects of both bubble and droplet formation, and the tendency of a fluid in
- a gravitational field to form a large-scale flat surface.
-
- 3.4.2 Surface Tension at Maximum Void Displacement
-
- Once the kinetic energy of void overshoot has been expended, surface tension
- will take over as the dominant force in the surface of voids in most fluids.
- As described above, its major effect will be to rapidly "smooth out" the
- surface of a the void and create a highly symmetrical spherical surface. Very
- large voids may be subject to fragmentation, but relatively small ones are
- far more likely to be "sphericized" than they are to fragment. The most
- likely remnants of asymmetry from the expansion phase will be comparatively
- large-scale ones, such as the void being an ovoid instead of a sphere.
-
- 3.4.3 Void Formation and Entropy
-
- The process of void formation is highly entropic in the sense that it cannot
- be reversed in time. Both the expansion phase and the restructuring of the
- void surface by surface tension "lose" information needed to make the inverse
- process of void collapse time-reversible.
-
- This entropic process can be understood by imagining an orderly arrangement
- of marbles at the bottom of a shallowly depressed, flexible sheet. If this
- sheet is very gently pushed upwards, the marbles will slowly begin to roll
- outward along paths determined primarily by their initial positions on the
- sheet. This kind of outward expansion is non-entropic and time reversible in
- the following sense: If the sheet is again allowed to relax back to its
- original shallowly depressed position, the marbles can in principle retrace
- their paths and literally reassemble themselves back into the same positions
- from which they originated. The reversal process (collapse) is in this case
- smooth and low in energy. Each marble is enclosed by other marbles of
- similar speed and direction, so that from the perspective of any individual
- marble the surrounding environment is very "cool" (low in energy differences).
-
- In contrast, if the marbles are allowed to expand over a sheet that is rough
- and allowed to come to rest on a circular rim around the sheet, all of the
- early time-reversible trajectory information that permitted each marble to
- "remember" its original location relative to its neighbors will be lost.
- Instead, when the sheet is flexed back down the marbles will all take on
- trajectories that try to take them to the same location in space at the same
- instant in time. Time reversibility thus has been lost, and the gentle
- return of the marbles to complementary positions has been replace with a
- "race" that ensures that there will be relatively violent collisions between
- the marbles as they attempt to occupy the same location in space and time.
-
- In the case of voids, this same kind of entropic "forgetting" of original
- positions occurs both as a result of rapid randomization of the trajectories
- of individual molecules during the expansion phase, and as a result of the
- strong coercing effect of surface tension, which tends to erase large-scale
- differences in where the molecules would have been "targeted" to return.
-
- All of this is relevant to the final intensity of void implosion in that a
- void which is characterized by nearly total "forgetting" of the original
- locations of all of the molecules on and near the void surface will result in
- a far more intense collapse than one in which significant remnants of that
- information can still be found in the detailed structure of the void. In an
- ideal "total position erasure" void, all of these molecules should be "aimed"
- at a single very tiny target area at the center of the void, and all of them
- should begin their inward trajectory at the same instant in time. The result
- is a highly time-asymmetric collapse profile in which "competition" for the
- interior target position of the void ensures much higher temperatures and
- pressures than ever existed during the original formation of the void.
-
- In contrast, a void in which there are severe long-range distortions of the
- void surface, such as a long stretching along one axis (a thin tube) or two
- axis (a thin sheet) will be far less severe (and far more time-symmetric) in
- their collapse.
-
- In summary, the degree of positional "forgetting" that is made possible both
- by the void expansion process and surface tension at maximum void
- displacement is a key initial condition for obtaining high intensity void
- implosions. The final intensity of that implosion process will of course be
- determined by many other factors, also, but without this initial condition of
- a past-erasing, highly spherical void form, very high final intensities are
- unlikely.
-
- 3.5 IMPLOSION INITIATION
-
- Another way of understanding the importance of spherical symmetry development
- (or "sphering" as it will be referred to below) is to recognize that when it
- is combined with a rapid, powerful inwardly directed acceleration of the void
- surface it becomes the microscopic equivalent of a spherical explosive of
- much higher quality and symmetry than can be obtained by large-scale
- processing of explosive charges. This micro-implosion analogy is useful in
- understanding the subsequent evolution of the void as it collapses, because
- it turns out that there are several forces which provide a substantial
- initial impulse for the collapse of such spherical voids.
-
- The three main forces working towards inward collapse of the void surface are:
-
- 1) Release of ZAS cell "overshoot" compressive potential energy
-
- 2) Ambient fluid pressure
-
- 3) Surface tension effects
-
- Collectively, these three effects provide a sufficiently strong and rapid
- inward acceleration of the void surface that the term "implosion" is used
- instead of "collapse." The use of the former term serves as a reminder that
- the process of void closure is both forceful and highly energetic at the
- physical scales involved.
-
- 3.5.1 Release of ZAS Cell Compressive Energy
-
- As described earlier, the initial expansion of the void in a decompressed
- fluid will normally lead to the conversion of the kinetic energy of void
- formation into compressive potential energy that is stored evenly throughout
- the ZAS cell. At maximum void displacement this stored energy will lead to a
- rapid rebound effect that begins accelerating the void cell surface inward.
- The magnitude of this effect will depend on many factors such as the detailed
- characteristics and compressibility of the fluid, but in general it should
- lead to a rapid and strong initial inward acceleration of the void surface as
- the compressive ZAS cell energy is converted back to kinetic motion.
-
- As with the initial outward expansion, the ZAS cell should develop an overall
- velocity profile in which the void surface is moving inward the fastest, with
- the velocity (and acceleration) falling off in an ideally linear profile
- until both reach zero at the ZAS boundary. This gradual profile is important
- not only because of the rapid and smooth acceleration of the void surface it
- provides, but because the inertial of the fluid around the void will help
- provide better containment (resistance to early rebound) as the process of
- void implosion intensifies.
-
- The release of compressive energy should nominally fall gradually to zero as
- the void approaches the point of zero average intra-fluid bond distortion,
- which (unless the pressure of the fluid is changing dynamically) will be well
- before the collapse process is completed. After that point the fluid will
- again be under tension and should act as a drag against further implosion.
-
- However, this profile can be modified by the use of dynamic pressure changes
- in the fluid, such as can be provided by appropriately designed standing
- sonic waves. By causing the ambient pressure of the ZAS cell to increase at
- or before the point where the void reaches its zero-ZAS-bond-distortion size,
- it should be possible to effectively nullify or even reverse the slowing
- effects of intra-fluid bond stretching.
-
- Even in the presence of a rapidly increasing ambient fluid pressure profile,
- however, the contribution of compression to the void collapse will eventually
- fade due to entropic effects. The fluid around the void cannot be compressed
- in an exact time reversal of the way in which it was expanded, so that adding
- high levels of external pressure will result more in heating of the fluid
- around the collapsing void than it will contribute directly to the collapse
- of the void.
-
- An important difference between early implosion in an explosively formed void
- and a decompression void is that the fluid immediately behind the surface of
- an explosive void will tend to "rebound" due to compression of that fluid
- during the initial explosion. This rebound effect will contribute to the
- speed of the void collapse by reducing the "drag effect" that would normally
- slow inward acceleration of the void surface.
-
- 3.5.2 Ambient Fluid Pressure
-
- While high ambient fluid pressures will of course help close a void and add
- to the initial implosion impulse, it must be recalled that for decompressive
- voids the ambient pressure in the ZAS cell must initially be negative, or
- else the void will never form in the first place. Thus a high ambient
- pressure amounts to the same case as using a rapidly increasing pressure
- profile during the collapse of the void, as described above for extending the
- useful length of ZAS cell compressive rebound. A high ambient pressure will
- be useful only if a decompression method that is sufficiently intense to
- overcome the ambient pressure can be used.
-
- On the positive side, the use of high ambient pressure provides a fairly
- simple way to construct a rapidly increasing pressure profile during the
- early stages of void collapse. In the case of standing sonic waves, it may
- be possible to further use the standing waves to shape the details of the
- increasing pressure profile.
-
- 3.5.3 Surface Tension Effects
-
- The effects of surface tension in driving the void collapse are especially
- interesting. Unlike compression of the liquid, surface tension will tend to
- inwardly accelerate the surface of the void more rapidly as the void size
- shrinks. This is a consequence of the general principle described earlier
- that surface tension tends to accelerate the molecules in small deformities
- more quickly than it does the molecules of large deformities, primarily due
- to surface forces being distributed over a smaller total numbers of molecules.
-
- Thus while surface tension may or may not be a dominant force (compared to
- compressive release) during the early stages of void collapse, it is likely
- to play a highly significant role later in the collapse. The constantly
- increasing inward force of surface tension on the void surface will continue
- until vaporization of the surface occurs and surface tension is thus lost.
- The importance of surface tension acceleration and loss of surface tension
- due to void surface vaporization will be discussed in more detail below,
- since it is particularly relevant to trying to determine the total energy
- that will be imparted during void implosion. (These same surface tension
- effects are also important for self-focusing.)
-
- 3.6 EARLY IMPLOSION
-
- Early implosion is the period between maximum void displacement and the
- vaporization (if any) of the void surface. Early implosion is the energy
- contribution phase, in which the void collapse process receives the majority
- of the total energy that will be available to it during the final stages of
- collapse.
-
- As described above in Section 3.5, the drivers of early implosion are rebound
- of the ZAS cell, ambient pressure, and surface tension. While for very large
- voids the ambient pressure would be the dominant effect, for small voids the
- other two effects of rebound and surface tension will become increasingly
- significant or dominant to the final energy contribution profile.
-
- However, for intense void implosions in ordinary fluids the early implosion
- phase must invariably end as a result of void surface heating. This surface
- heating is a direct consequence of the "competition" for the same location in
- space and time that the molecules in the void surface must undergo in a
- spherical collapse. As the total void surface area decreases, molecules must
- be "forced out" of the surface and outward into the surrounding fluid, an
- effect which jostles the molecules and results in rapidly a rapidly
- increasing temperature at the void surface.
-
- Along with this heating effect there will also be an increase in void surface
- pressure as too many molecules compete for the same space. This increase in
- pressure will in general reach a maximum very slightly outward from the void
- surface, but for a very rapid implosion it may be present essentially at the
- void surface due to inertial (acceleration) confinement of surface molecules.
-
- The combination of void surface heating and void surface pressure increases
- will complicate the behavior of the void collapse and make it dependent on
- the particular properties of the fluid, but for ordinary fluids the effects
- of heating will eventually win out and cause loss of surface tension (that
- is, vaporization) at the implosion surface. Despite this vaporization event,
- the surface may remain rather sharply defined if collapse rate is very high.
- But the loss of surface tension has other important effects, such as loss of
- the accelerating effects of surface tension, even if the surface itself
- remains sharply defined.
-
- The vaporization of the void surface will be referred to below as the
- Vaporization Event, or VE.
-
- 3.6.1 Factors Affecting Early Implosion Energy Contribution
-
- The main factors that affect the overall energy contribution during the early
- implosion phase include:
-
- 1) Size of the void (the larger the better)
-
- 2) Available ZAS cell compression energy (the higher the better)
-
- 3) Increasing ambient pressure (best if "tuned" to collapse process)
-
- 4) High surface tension (the higher the better)
-
- 5) Delay of the vaporization event
-
- Larger voids increase the total energy contribution simply by extending the
- length of the acceleration phase. However, larger void sizes involve factors
- that tend to work against the benefits of a longer acceleration period.
- These include increased venting of gases into the void, increased turbulence,
- and failure to make good use of surface tension acceleration prior to
- vaporization of the void surface. Thus the use of larger voids can be more
- complex than it might at first appear.
-
- The ZAS compression energy is most effective if the fluid is both elastic
- under compression and capable of significant energy storage when under
- decompressive tension.
-
- Rapid increases in ambient pressure should be oriented towards adding energy
- early in the collapse and preventing "drag" on surface tension acceleration
- during later phases. Additionally, it should help provide overall pressure
- confinement during the final stages of collapse by preventing premature
- rebound of the outer fluid layers around collapsing void. Resonances and
- standing wave methods provide the most direct approach to implementing such
- detailed pressure increase profiles.
-
- High surface tension comes into play not only as an accelerating force, but
- also as a self-focusing mechanism (see below).
-
- Delaying the vaporization event is particularly important if the void size
- becomes small enough for surface tension acceleration to become significant.
- The simplest approach is to pick a fluid with a high boiling point and to set
- the ambient temperature of the fluid to be as low as possible. Mixtures of
- fluids often demonstrate higher boiling points than pure liquids, so this
- point also argues for the use of such "antifreeze" style fluid mixtures.
-
- 3.6.2 Self-Focusing Effects
-
- Until this point surface tension has been discussed primarily in the contexts
- of initial shaping of the maximum displacement void surface, and acceleration
- of the void surface during early implosion. However, another important
- effect of surface tension is that it provides "self-alignment" or focusing of
- the collapse process itself. The significance of this is that self-focusing
- effects can significantly delay the onset of turbulence and thus increase the
- intensity of the final stages of the collapse.
-
- 3.6.2.1 Radial Self-Focusing
-
- Radial self-focusing refers to the tendency of surface tension to produce a
- surface in which any line normal to the surface points to the exact center of
- the void. Because of the tendency of a liquid surface to suppress small
- deviation more with greater force, this tendency may actually be grow
- stronger as the void shrinks in size.
-
- When combined with implosion, radial self-focusing due to surface tension has
- the effect of "guiding" or correcting the trajectory of inward-bound
- molecules so that they remain targeted towards the center of the void.
-
- 3.6.2.2 Temporal Self-Focusing
-
- Temporal self-focusing refers to the tendency for surface tension to keep the
- entire void surface collapsing at very nearly the same rate. As with radial
- self-focusing, this effect should increase in strength as the void collapses.
- Temporal self-focusing has the net effect of keeping the molecules of the
- void surface targeted to arrive at the center of the void at the same instant.
-
-
- 3.7 MID IMPLOSION
-
- Although the vaporization event corresponds roughly to the end of external
- energy contribution into the void collapse, it does not necessarily represent
- the end of energy intensification. In the next (mid implosion) phase the
- emphasis shifts from mechanisms that contribute to the total energy of the
- void collapse to a new set of mechanisms that serve to focus or collect the
- energy of many inwardly moving molecules and transfer it to a smaller number
- of correspondingly more energetic molecules. It is this process, rather than
- the initial implosion drivers, that is the most likely to make extremely high
- densities and temperatures possible during a void collapse.
-
- 3.7.1 Wedge-Out Effect
-
- The tendency for the void surface to increase in both pressure and
- temperature as it implodes has already been mentioned, but these effects need
- to be looked at in more detail to understand the details of the later stages
- of implosion. In particular, the high spherical symmetry of an intense
- collapse should lead to a tendency for these temperature and pressure effects
- to be both selective and directional in nature. In particular, faster or
- more mobile molecules or ions should tend to be selectively given still
- higher velocities that will be oriented primarily towards the center of the
- void. This _wedge-out effect_ is particularly important for estimating the
- final energy intensity of the void collapse, since it presents a mechanism by
- which the final stages of void collapse might reach almost arbitrarily high
- densities and temperatures.
-
- The term "wedge-out" intentionally has a mechanical connotation of forcing or
- "popping out" an object under extreme mechanical pressure. Figure 1 shows an
- idealized wedge-out scenario.
-
-
- Pressure
- | | | |
- v v v v
-
- --> ()()()|
- --> ()()()| () Slightly slower molecules
- Pressure --> ()() <>| <> Slightly faster molecule
- --> ()()()| | Void surface (gaseous)
- --> ()()()|
-
- ^ ^ ^ ^
- | | | |
- Pressure
-
- ---------->
- Overall Direction
- of Acceleration
- (All Molecules)
-
-
- Figure 1 -- The Wedge-Out Effect
-
-
- For elastic objects such as atoms, the scenario described in Figure 1 is
- capable of transferring the kinetic energy of a number of (slower) molecules
- into a lesser number of faster molecules that can then "escape" into the
- interior of the void while carrying off most of the kinetic energy of that
- originally belonged to the slower molecules. The effect can be described
- formally in terms of conversion of energy using two low-friction wedges to
- rapidly accelerate an object between the wedges, but can perhaps be more
- easily understood by the informal analogy of launching a slippery seed at
- high speed by squeezing it tightly between two fingers. Even though the
- fingers never move at a high speed, they are capable of producing a rapid,
- intensive acceleration of the seed and a commensurately large increase its
- final momentum and energy.
-
- Wedge-out is relevant in void collapse only because the extreme inward
- compression of the void surface and lateral compression due to shrinking void
- surface area create a very difficult "competition" among void surface
- molecules. Essentially all "escape routes" except inward ones are blocked
- for nearly all of the surface molecules, and even those paths are severely
- limited by rapid shrinking of the void surface. By "wedging out" any
- molecule that has moved slightly farther into the interior due either to
- chance or a higher average velocity, the slower molecules are able to expend
- some of their inward kinetic energy while simultaneously reducing the total
- number of molecules in the surface. Slightly faster molecules or ions thus
- will be preferred for this "launching" into the void interior, since they
- will be the ones that are more likely to protrude slightly towards the
- interior.
-
- Wedge-out thus can be thought of a "directed" temperature rise, in which the
- kinetic energy of the molecules increases as in a normal temperature rise,
- but the direction in which the rise in kinetic energy occurs will be strongly
- biased towards the interior of the void.
-
- Two key requirements for an effective wedge-out effect are that:
-
- 1) the interior of the void be as empty of gases as possible, and
-
- 2) the surface of the void remain as sharply defined as possible.
-
- The first of these requirements simply reflects the need for a clear, well-
- defined "exit path" to keep the wedge-out effect directional. Gases in the
- interior of the void will make alternative energy release paths (primarily
- random-motion heating of the void surface) more attractive and rapidly reduce
- the acceleration affect provided by wedge-out.
-
- The second requirement for a well defined void surface reflects the need to
- keep a very high pressure profile as close to the void surface as possible.
- If the point of maximum pressure falls too far behind the collapsing void
- surface, the result will again be to make alternative random-heat energy
- release paths more attractive than wedge-out.
-
- In short, the wedge-out effect will be most effective when the sharpest
- possible contrast between void surface pressure and interior void pressure
- can be maintained. A very sharp, very well-defined transition from extremely
- high pressure to a hard vacuum should allow the wedge-out effect to produce
- quite phenomenal accelerations of some subset of the void surface molecules.
-
- It is worth noting that wedge-out is primarily a gaseous effect, and that for
- single-molecular fluids it is unlikely to become a significant factor until
- after the vaporization event. The reason is that surface tension will tend
- to resist allowing any of the fluid molecules to "get ahead" enough to permit
- wedge-out to dominate until after vaporization of the surface.
-
- However, for multi-molecular fluid wedge-out may become a significant effect
- even in the pre-vaporization early acceleration phase, since the dominant
- fluid may permit other components to "leak out" into the leading edge of the
- void surface.
-
- 3.7.2 Wedge-Out Cascades
-
- Wedge-out becomes even more interesting when it is note that it can (at least
- in principle) be cascaded. That is, the highly accelerated molecules
- resulting from the first major wedge-out event may, if sufficiently even in
- both radial and temporal distribution, come together to cause a second wedge-
- out event in which another component is "launched" at even higher velocity.
- Just as a multi-stage rocket permit small payloads to reach phenomenally high
- velocities, such wedge-out cascades could in principle result in phenomenally
- high final velocities of a (generally very small) "payload" of lightweight,
- fast particles that have been "distilled" out of the liquid by repeated
- applications of the wedge-out effect.
-
- Due to the self-focusing effects of surface tension, it appears quite likely
- that first-order wedge-out effects can almost certainly be obtained by high-
- quality cavitation experiments. An interesting experimental question is then
- whether second and higher-order wedge-out cascades can be constructed to
- provided even higher final accelerations and energies. One clear requirement
- for obtaining higher-order wedge-out events will be a very high level of
- initial symmetry, since otherwise the growth of turbulence will rapidly make
- the formation of a sharp pressure/vacuum interface impossible.
-
- Speculations concerning the limits of compression in sonoluminescence would
- tend to support the idea that some sort of unusual acceleration phenomenon
- exists in highly symmetrical cavitation phenomena [7]. Wedge-out and wedge-
- out cascades could well provide just such a mechanism.
-
- 3.7.3 Wedge-Out Shells
-
- Because the wedge-out process will favor lighter, faster molecules and ions,
- there should be a natural tendency for components of the fluid to separate
- and form shells of distinct chemical composition during the last stages of
- the collapse. These wedge-out shells are of interest because formation of
- "clean" shells of a uniform composition may encourage the development of
- wedge-out cascades (and thus much higher final temperatures and pressures).
-
- The formation of wedge-out shells could also result in new (very short-lived)
- liquid surfaces, since the newly separated components may behave differently
- under the extreme pressures of the void implosion. Whether these new liquid
- surfaces would have time to influence (in particular, to re-focus) the inward
- motion of the void surface is difficult to say without explicit simulation or
- experimental modeling.
-
- 3.7.4 Ionization of Wedge-Out Shells
-
- It should be noted that because the wedge-out process is primarily mechanical
- in nature, it should be capable of accelerating not just whole molecules, but
- also charged (ionic) fluid components. Thus is should be possible for highly
- charged wedge-out shells for form during the collapse process, owing to the
- preferential separation of any charged ions whose average velocity in the
- fluid is greater than that of the majority fluid molecules. The formation of
- such charged shells will of course be an energy-consuming event, and would in
- general reduce the final intensity of the collapse.
-
- However, the formation of charged wedge-out shells would be extremely
- interesting from both a theoretical viewpoint and an exploratory,
- experimental viewpoint. Recombination of the charges after rebound would
- lead to various forms of electromagnetic radiation, whose overall features
- would tend to be complex due to the details of the recombination currents in
- the type of highly dynamic environment that should exist during the final
- stages of the void collapse.
-
- It is entirely possible that sono-luminescence [8], an effect that has
- already been observed in cavitation research, is an example of one of the
- electromagnetic radiation effects stemming from wedge-out shell ionization of
- the inner layers of a void collapse. Further examination of such
- luminescence effects as possible evidence for the formation of wedge-out
- shells would be most interesting, since it would tend to confirm that
- cavitation possesses an acceleration mechanism (wedge-out) by which
- exceptionally high energies could be obtained by void collapse phenomena.
-
- One of the most important "side-effects" of the formation of ionized wedge-
- out shells would be its potential as an effective tool for exploring the
- details of the final void collapse. Radiation released by recombination
- should be rich in information about both the formation of such shells and
- their subsequent development. It should also provide important information
- on how various experimental parameters may result in higher or lower final
- pressures. Appropriate ions could also be "seeded" at low levels to act as
- tracers for higher intensity void implosions, since in general the energy-
- draining formation of high levels of charge in the shells will need to be
- avoided to reach the highest possible final pressures and temperatures.
-
- 3.7.5 Plasma Event
-
- For highly symmetrical, highly energetic void collapses, the mechanisms of
- wedge-out and (possibly) wedge-out cascades should be capable of producing
- late implosion energies that are easily capable of ionizing the imploding
- gas. (This tends to be confirmed also by the presence of ultraviolet light
- in sono-luminescence [9], which implies a significant level of ionization.)
- This ionization process may be assisted or quickened by the formation of
- charged shells when the liquid contains ionic components, but should also be
- capable of occurring as a result of inward acceleration effects alone.
-
- The mid implosion phase is arbitrarily defined as ending when the void
- surface becomes primarily a plasma in composition (the Plasma Event, or PE).
- It should be noted that the plasma formed at the time of this event should
- for a very symmetrical collapse consist of very high velocity ionized
- particles whose velocity vectors are still directed inward toward the void
- center. As long as this inward velocity of the plasma remains largely
- intact, the maximum implosion temperature and pressure will not yet have been
- reached.
-
-
- 3.8 LATE IMPLOSION
-
- 3.8.1 Initial Conditions for Late Implosion
-
- The late implosion phase extends from the plasma event until termination of
- the implosion by one or more rebound effects, which are discussed in the next
- section.
-
- Ideally, late implosion should begin as a set of inwardly directed plasma
- ions that are still focused on a shared central point. Wedge-out effects are
- still conceivable during the late implosion if the radial and temporal
- symmetry of these inwardly directed plasma components remain high enough.
-
- 3.8.2 Micro Ion Fusion (MIF) Analogy
-
- One way of viewing the potential intensity of the late implosion is to note
- its similarity to a microscopic version of what is known as "ion fusion," in
- which very fast ions are directed inwards to a single target point in order
- to induce light-element fusion. Although constructed in a very different
- fashion, the "machinery" of early and mid implosion of a well-formed void may
- very well be capable of producing a final scenario that is essentially the
- same as that of ion fusion -- that is, a set of roughly synchronized ions
- moving radially inwards at a very high velocity towards a common target.
-
- This "Micro Ion Fusion" (MIF) analogy also helps emphasize the need for more
- experimentation to determine what, exactly, is the final densities and
- temperatures possible through cavitation collapse. Because of the extreme
- simplicity of "building" liquid void "mechanisms" in comparison to large-
- scale ion fusion machinery, an experimental verification that inwardly
- directed plasma streams actually do exist in some forms of cavitation would
- be of considerable interest theoretically and experimentally.
-
-
- 3.9 IMPLOSION TERMINATION
-
- In this section the various mechanisms that lead to termination of inward
- motion of the void surface are discussed.
-
- 3.9.1 Implosion Termination Due to Pressure of Void Gas
-
- The single most detrimental to achieving high-intensity void implosions is
- the presence of a low-quality vacuum in the void -- that is, the presence of
- significant levels of void gases.
-
- The negative impact of void gases can be imagined in part by recognizing that
- in the extreme case they result in a stable, non-collapsing gas-filled bubble
- instead of an unstable void. In less extreme cases the void gases will
- result in a very rapidly increasing pressure profile as the void shrinks in
- size, so that at some point the outward pressure of the void gases will cause
- the collapse process to stall. Such a scenario will result in moderately
- high pressures and temperatures through simple compression, but is unlikely
- to result in exceptional pressure or temperatures for three reasons:
-
- 1) the collapse energy will be spread out over too many gas molecules,
-
- 2) wedge-out acceleration mechanisms will be "shut down" prematurely, and
-
- 3) gas impinging on the void surface may damage its symmetry and cohesion.
-
- The first effect of excessive spreading of energy is unavoidable because the
- central gases retain their "information" on their relative position and thus
- behave in a simple spring-like compressive fashion. As mentioned earlier in
- the discussion of void formation and entropy, achieving very high pressures
- and temperatures depends critically on getting as much of the system as
- possible to "forget" the original comparatively orderly arrangement of
- molecules, and instead have them "compete" for a single position in space and
- time. Void gases fail to meet this criterion, and thus act as a serious
- "drag" to increasing the final collapse intensity.
-
- The second effect of premature shut down of the wedge-out acceleration
- mechanism is a consequence of the fact that wedge-out requires a very sharp
- pressure/vacuum transition at the void surface, a condition that is not
- possible if the gas pressure within the void rises rapidly.
-
- Finally, the presence of gases will also negatively impact the void surface
- by encouraging small-scale turbulent behavior and lessening surface tension
- through the impact of the gas molecules. These are comparatively minor
- effects, but still may need to be taken into account in some cases.
-
- Termination of implosion due to void gases is significant not only because of
- its negative effects on final intensity, but also because it is very easy for
- voids to acquire such gases. Voids naturally tend to "scoop up" gases as
- they form, so that initially the voids that form in a fluid are unlikely to
- be capable of significant implosion intensities. On the other hand, the void
- mechanism itself can be used to help rid the fluid of dissolved gases, so
- that a similar experimental arrangement can be used both to "clean" the fluid
- and subsequently produce more intense collapses.
-
- Another key factor is fluid vaporization, since some level of fluid molecules
- will almost certainly end up in the void. The use of cooled fluids and fluid
- mixtures with very low vapor pressures can help greatly in this area. (An
- added benefit is that these same characteristics will also tend to help in
- the formation and preservation of surface tension during the early stages of
- the void collapse.)
-
- 3.9.2 Implosion Termination Due to Void Surface Turbulence
-
- Prior to the vaporization event, a fluid with strong surface tension is
- likely to be highly effective at minimizing turbulence in the void surface.
- This again emphasizes the importance of maintaining a liquid surface for as
- long as possible during the void collapse, since even a small delay in the
- onset of turbulence can provide a significant improvement in the orderliness
- of the final collapse.
-
- However, after the vaporization event the radial and temporal self-focusing
- effects of surface tension will be lost and turbulence will begin to grow
- much more rapidly. Compression will lead to a limited form of radial self-
- focusing after the VE, since each void surface molecule will be constrained
- into a largely radial path by the pressure of the molecules around it.
-
- However, this limited form of compression-induced radial alignment is
- unstable with respect to temporal alignment. That is, the pressure effects
- will also increasingly encourage some parts of the surface either to fall
- behind or race ahead of the average void surface. (Wedge-out acceleration is
- in fact a "favorable" form of this temporal instability effect, provided that
- the inward wedge-out of fluid occurs in a sufficiently symmetrical fashion.)
- After a time, the instability of the surface with respect to time will cause
- a general loss of order and cause the "directed heat" of the imploding
- molecules to become ordinary (non-directed) heat.
-
- Again, the presence of a very hard vacuum in the void interior can help delay
- the onset of temporal instabilities by providing a clear "direction" in which
- some fraction of the faster molecules can head. This "race effect" can in
- effect "filter out" initial levels of turbulence by allowing a subset of the
- molecules to enter an energetically favorable region of (empty) space.
-
- Another factor that can help delay turbulence is a high particle momentum. A
- heavy-mass molecule should tend to be affected by turbulence at a somewhat
- lower rate than a light, easily disturbed molecule.
-
- 3.9.3 Implosion Termination Due to Loss of Confinement Layers
-
- Another mechanism by which implosion maybe terminated is loss of one or more
- of the outer "confinement layers" surrounding the collapsing void. These are
- layers of fluid that should (ideally) display a pressure profile that during
- the final stages of collapse increases monotonically in towards the central
- collapse.
-
- Stated in a somewhat different form, it is important that all the layers of
- fluid around the collapse retain either a slight inward velocity or no
- velocity at all during the period of the final collapse. If any of these
- outer layers "rebounds" and loses its pressure prematurely, the net effect
- will be a "peeling back" of layers until the central void collapse is
- reached. As the decompression reaches the central void it will rapidly
- become turbulent and then rebound back into the surrounding fluid.
-
- A qualification to this is that if the lost confinement layer is far enough
- out from the central collapse, it may not influence that collapse until after
- the central void has reached its maximum intensity.
-
- To avoid termination due to the loss of confinement layers, the overall
- pressure profile around the central void should at least be taken into
- account in modeling the final collapse. Modification of the decompression
- and compression cycles for the void should then be able to limit or avoid
- premature rebound of such confinement layers.
-
- 3.9.4 Implosion Termination Due to Charge Build-Up
-
- As mentioned earlier, the wedge-out effect should be capable of producing
- some separation of ionized fluid components, leading to the build-up of
- layers of charge around the collapsing void. The formation of significantly
- charged shells would be a significant drain on the energy available to the
- collapse process, and in some cases may be sufficient to halt the implosion.
-
-
- 3.10 REGION OF MAXIMUM ENERGY (ROME)
-
- The late implosion phase ends with termination of directed inward motion, and
- results in a (generally turbulent and roughly isotropic) region of maximum
- energy density. Due to turbulence, this Region Of Maximum Energy (ROME) will
- in most cases be a ragged-edged region in space-time, and will contain a
- (generally very small) quantity of very high temperature gases.
-
- The duration of the ROME will depend largely on how smoothly the confinement
- pressure profile around the ROME falls back to zero. If the profile falls in
- an orderly, uniform fashion the ROME may persist considerably longer than for
- the case of an irregular breakup of the pressure confinement profile (which
- will in turn lead to earlier loss of one or more confinement layers). As in
- ion fusion devices, the use of high-mass particles for the fluid may also
- help extend the duration of the ROME through simple inertial effects in both
- the ROME itself and in the surrounding confinement pressure profile.
-
- As described earlier, experimental evidence for ROMEs that contain high-
- temperature plasmas already exists for some cooled water-based cavitation
- systems [3] [9]. Thus it appears likely that even more intense ROMEs can be
- created in future generations of cavitation systems. Given reports of
- effective temperatures in the tens of thousands of degrees for existing
- cavitation systems and the existence of many currently poorly controlled
- parameters in such systems, it appears likely that ROMEs with temperatures in
- the million degree range are at least plausible. The combination of possible
- accelerating mechanisms such the wedge-out effect and existing reports of
- very high temperatures would certainly appear to make the effort to at least
- try for such high temperatures plausible.
-
- Obviously, on of the most interesting experiments to try if high-intensity
- ROMEs can be created and verified would be fusion of light hydrogen isotopes
- such as tritium and deuterium, possibly in combination with lithium. Indeed,
- in some cases such materials might even act as important experimental probes
- for testing and gaining a better understanding of ROME properties.
-
-
- 3.11 POST-IMPLOSION REBOUND
-
- Post-implosion rebound is most notable here in that it may help generate a
- second-generation (explosively formed) void. Such effects will be increased
- if the implosion produces a net release of energy. Cyclic void formation
- processes, such as those provided by sonic standing waves, will need to take
- rebound into account to accurately model and "tune" the cyclic void formation
- process.
-
-
- 4. EXPERIMENTAL
-
- 4.1 MATERIALS
-
- 4.1.1 General Materials Characteristics
-
- The following is a list of general characteristics that should be favorable
- towards the production of intense cavitation events:
-
- 1) Resistance to void formation
-
- 2) Low vapor pressure
-
- 3) Simple, highly stable molecular composition
-
- 4) Small molecule size (atomic being ideal)
-
- 5) High molecular weight
-
- In general, the harder a liquid is to cavitate, the more likely it will be to
- produce highly intense void collapses. Resistance to cavitation tends to
- indicate both very strong intra-fluid bonding and a low vapor pressure, both
- of which should be highly advantageous to void formation and collapse.
-
- The need for a low vapor pressure is a direct consequence of the need to keep
- a very hard vacuum in the void interior.
-
- Simple, highly stable molecules are needed to prevent non-collapse mechanisms
- paths from draining energy from the void collapse. Molecules that are easily
- broken apart may both absorb energy and complicate surface mechanics during
- the early collapse.
-
- Molecules that are too large will be hard to accelerate during and rearrange
- during the final stages of collapse, and in extreme cases could lead to an
- "arch effect" in which the void surface briefly locks up into a highly
- resistant, semi-solid structure. Additionally, large "floppy" molecules are
- more likely to convert the energy of rearrangement into wasted (premature)
- heat. From this perspective the ideal molecule for cavitation are those
- whose molecules consist of single atoms, which are both highly mobile and
- highly elastic under collision.
-
- Finally, a high molecular weight is helpful (but not critical), since it can
- extend the duration of the ROME and possibly make the ROME significantly more
- intense. The analogy here is a simple one: Hitting two sledge hammers
- together tends to be a more energetic event than hitting two ordinary hammers
- together.
-
- Where mixtures of fluids meet some of these criteria better than individual
- fluids (e.g., by reducing vapor pressure), those mixtures may also provide
- good cavitation candidates.
-
- 4.1.2 Specific Possibilities for Materials
-
- When combined, these recommended characteristics point to two particularly
- interesting classes of fluids for cavitation experiments:
-
- 1) Water, small-molecule water-like, and mixtures of these
-
- 2) Mercury, liquid metals, and mixtures of these
-
- Mercury in particular is an exceedingly interesting candidate because of its
- very high surface tension, low vapor pressure, single-atom composition, and
- high molecular (atomic) weight. However, it has the disadvantage of being
- impermeable to nearly all forms of electromagnetic radiation, making it
- difficult to verify the consequences of cavitation. Indeed, in the case of
- mercury it may be necessary to use an isotope such as tritium simply to
- permit "fusion tracing" of the radiation results of cavitation events that
- are (presumably) intense enough to fuse such materials.
-
- There are many other metals (e.g, gallium, lead, tin, and the alkaline metal
- of Li, Na, P, and Cs) that melt at low temperatures and are also relatively
- easy to work with (and in the case of tin, far less toxic) than mercury. For
- such metals the term "cold" can be used relatively, since the key issues are
- low vapor pressure and enduring surface tension, rather than low temperatures
- per se. Metals and other substances that maintain these characteristics at
- high temperature should be quite usable, even if the absolute temperatures at
- which they become fluids are well above room temperature.
-
- Metal mixtures and mercury amalgams are also interesting candidates for
- cascaded wedge-out effects, since it may be possible for distinct wedge-out
- shells of different atomic masses to form more readily from such a medium.
-
- Water and mixtures of low-mass, water-like molecules (e.g., the (CHOH)nH2
- family that includes methanol, glycol, and glycerin) are also interesting
- candidates due to their small sizes and strong, easily rearranged hydrogen
- bonding. Moreover, these media are much easier to work with experimentally
- because of their transparency to most forms of electromagnetic radiation.
- Finally, water and related hydrogen-bonded liquids are capable of dissolving
- a wide variety of ionic substances that could prove useful in both modifying
- and experimentally tracing cavitation properties in such fluids.
-
- Mixing such hydrogen-bonded fluids can drastically lower freezing point of
- the fluids, so that very cold initial fluids can be used both to greatly
- reduce vapor pressure during void expansion, and to increase the period of
- time for which surface tension will provides self-focusing and acceleration
- of the void surface.
-
- 4.1.3 Purity of Materials
-
- As noted before, "ready to use" materials should have extremely low levels of
- dissolved gases to prevent premature implosion termination. Salts and other
- soluble materials are less likely to interfere, but the possibility that they
- could enhance the formation of charged layers and thus reduce the energy of
- the final collapse should at least be taken into account.
-
- A more complex issue is that of particulate impurities. In general some
- degree of particular impurities are likely to be needed to provide seeds for
- nanovoid formation, but too many particles (especially too many large
- particles) is likely to degrade the ability to form high-quality voids.
-
- Ideally, particles in the fluid should be as small as possible while still
- permitting formation of nanovoids at reasonable decompression intensities,
- and common enough to be readily available at the void formation site.
-
- 4.1.4 Gas and Particulate Doping
-
- Both gases and particulate material may be intentionally introduced into a
- fluid for the explicit purpose of providing "targets" for the final implosion
- of cavitation voids.
-
- In the case of gases the idea would be to add a very low lever of dissolved
- "target" gas, such that a very small quantity of the gas will be swept up by
- the void during expansion. A disadvantage of such an approach is that even a
- very small increase in the total gas in the void may greatly reduce the final
- intensity of the collapse.
-
- A potentially superior approach is to intentionally introduce very small,
- solid particles that will act both as seeds for initial void formation and as
- "targets" during the final collapse. The solid state of the target keeps it
- from interfering with the collapse process, and potentially could allow a
- sharp pressure/vacuum transition to exist in the void surface until the very
- last instant of the collapse.
-
- While a solid target in a vacuum void will fall somewhat due to gravity, the
- generally very short time between expansion and collapse (e.g., half of an
- ultrasound cycle) should keep the target particle near the needed location.
- The intentional introduction of a slight vertical asymmetry into the initial
- expansion of the void might also provide a mechanism by which the target
- could be "tossed upwards" and subsequently fall back to the position where
- the implosion will reach its maximum. Finally, the high pressure of the
- implosion surface should provide a strong sweeping effect on a solid
- particle, moving it towards the center (but at the cost of some of the
- spherical symmetry of the final collapse).
-
- In general, seed/target particles should have surfaces that are not easily
- wet (adhered to) by the fluid selected. Thus a seed/target in liquid metal
- should not mix with the metal, and a seed/target in water and water-like
- fluids should have a hydrophobic (oil-like) surface. The importance of this
- is that it provides a natural base for the formation of a nanovoid.
-
- One interesting long-term class of seed/targets for water like-fluids and
- possibly liquid metal fluids) would be graphite-jacketed "fullerene" spheres
- of large size.
-
-
- 4.2 INITIAL TEMPERATURE
-
- In general, the absolute temperature of a cavitation fluid should be less
- significant than how temperature effects vapor pressure and the duration of
- surface tension during collapse. Thus a relatively high temperature for a
- liquid metal such as lead might prove to be just as effective as a much lower
- temperature for a mix of hydrogen-bonded, water-like liquids.
-
- Thus temperatures should be selected primarily on the basis of how they
- affect the particular fluid selected. In general, the lower range of
- temperatures at which the fluid remains free-flowing should give better
- results than the higher temperature ranges for that same fluid.
-
-
- 4.3 INITIAL PRESSURE
-
- In general a high initial pressure should help contribute to both the initial
- implosion impulse and subsequent confinement of the implosion layers around
- the collapsing void. However, it should be noted that the decompression
- method used will always have to "fight against" this initial pressure, so
- that substantially more energetic decompression mechanisms may be required.
- This added energy then contributes to the void collapse once it is formed,
- and so falls under the general rule of "the harder to cavitate, the better."
-
-
- 4.4 PHYSICAL SET-UP AND TECHNIQUES
-
- 4.4.1 Single-Node Sonic Decompression Methods
-
- The most powerful and symmetrical decompression generators are spherical-
- symmetry, single-void ultrasonic generators, such as those described by
- Steven Jones for ongoing work at BYU [4]. It is likely that if interesting
- collapse phenomena can be found that these types of generators will be the
- best for initial identification and exploration of such effects.
-
- A somewhat less exact form of single-node decompression would be to use
- either a long parabolic reflector and a plane wave generator, or two "end to
- end" parabolic reflectors with a small, point-like sonic generator at the
- focus of one of the generators [10].
-
- 4.4.2 Multi-Node Sonic Decompression Methods
-
- Another class of sonic based generators are "lattice" generators that create
- a three-dimensional field of alternating compression and decompression
- regions, each of which has a reasonably high (e.g., cubic) initial level of
- symmetry. The simplest way to construct an example of such a cavitation
- lattice is to direct a plane sound wave into a corner-cube reflector.
- Reflections within the corner-cube will then result in the formation of a
- field of compression/decompression regions with roughly cubic symmetry.
-
- Since lattice methods provide only modest radial symmetry during expansion,
- it is likely that a high surface-tension liquid and careful timing of the
- decompression/compression cycle would be needed to allow surface tension to
- thoroughly restructure the void surface at peak void displacement. In
- particular, a pressure cycle that would tend to extend the period of peak
- displacement would provide more time for reshaping of the void surface.
-
-
- 4.4.3 Impulse Decompression Methods
-
- Impulse generators could be constructed in the lab by techniques as simple as
- tapping a piston that has been arranged to decompress a fluid within a
- cylinder. Such simple methods would have difficulty competing with
- ultrasonic generation, but impulse decompression has the advantage of being
- able to generate unusually severe decompressions.
-
- For example, the same cylinder just described could be severely decompressed
- by firing a high-speed projectile at the piston, instead of simply tapping it
- with a hammer. For very pure, very low-gas fluids such explosively rapid
- decompressions could make intense cavitation possible in fluids that might
- not respond to ultrasound or other milder techniques.
-
-
- 4.5 SONIC FREQUENCY AND INTENSITY
-
- A final point about experimental setups is simply to note the importance of
- scanning a broad range of both frequency and intensity for sonic (and
- impulse) generation methods. Because the number of variables that could
- potentially affect final cavitation intensity, it may, for example, not
- always be the case that "more intense is better." Subtler effects such as
- loss of confinement layers around a void may in some cases mean that lower
- intensities or frequencies will work better.
-
- Eventually, detailed shaping of sonic pressure cycles to match the particular
- characteristics of a fluid would probably provide the best results.
-
-
- 5. Ultra Cavitation in Nature
-
- Perhaps one of the most interesting aspect of the idea of ultra cavitation is
- that if it exists at all, it may quite possibly also exist as a natural
- effect. This is particularly interesting in light of earlier proposals by
- Jones et al [11] that the heat output of large planets may in part be due to
- some form of very-low-level natural fusion. Natural ultra cavitation could
- quite possibly provide both a plausible mechanism by which such very-low-
- level fusion might occur. Perhaps more importantly, the specificity of the
- conditions needed for ultra cavitation to occur should make such hypotheses
- empirically testable through simulations of relevant natural conditions.
-
- 5.1 CANDIDATE FLUIDS FOR NATURAL ULTRA CAVITATION
-
- The major natural fluids in which some form of cavitation could (at least in
- principle) occur include:
-
- 1) Surface and free-flowing water
-
- 2) Ocean bed and thermal vent water
-
- 3) Hydro fluids associated with deep faults
-
- 4) Hydro fluids associated with subduction
-
- 5) Volcanic magmas
-
- 6) Liquid iron alloys at the mantle/outer-core interface
-
- 7) Liquid iron alloys at the inner-core/outer-core interface
-
- 5.2 EARTHQUAKES, SUBDUCTION, AND IMPULSE DECOMPRESSION
-
- With possible exception of free-flowing surface water, the best candidate
- mechanism for void formation in all of these fluids would be some form of
- impulse decompression. The likelihood of successful void formation by this
- method will fall drastically for very deep, very high-pressure fluids such as
- the liquid iron alloys of earth's outer core, but cannot be excluded even
- here for sufficiently energetic impulse decompressions. If cavitation does
- occur at such depths, it would inherently be very high in available energy.
- The question would be more one of whether the very rapid collapse of a void
- at such a depth would permit the development of a high degree of symmetry in
- the void.
-
- The simplest model for natural impulse decompression is the "snapping" of a
- rock that already contains a fluid-filled crack. Such a scenario places
- sever stress of the fluid near the center of the crack, and should be capable
- of forming significant voids even deep within the earth.
-
- The "snapping" idea is particularly interesting in conjunction with hydro
- fluids that are associated with both deep faults and subduction zones, where
- often extremely vigorous fracturing of rock is a commonplace occurrence. It
- seems likely that in such regions the basic requirements for cavitation of
- some sort are not only available, but highly likely.
-
- The question then becomes one of whether the fluids involved are capable of
- meeting the criteria for ultra cavitation -- that is, cavitation in which the
- void contains a vacuum of exceptionally high quality, and the spherical
- symmetry of the void is high. Both hydro fluids and (perhaps) highly fluid
- magmas could be worth considering in this regard.
-
- A question of this type cannot easily be answered without detailed estimates
- of the nature of such fluids, their gas contents, how they will evolve over
- time (e.g., will they tend to degass?), and other features relevant to the
- formation of high-quality voids. A positive feature of such questions is
- that they should be amenable to experimental testing and simulation.
-
- As a research issue, perhaps the best approach to resolving whether a natural
- form of ultra cavitation could lead to very-low-level fusion within the earth
- would be to first verify whether or not significant levels of fusion can be
- achieved with cavitation in a controlled laboratory environment. If the
- answer to that question should turn out to be "yes," then it would seem
- highly appropriate for the question of natural ultra cavitation fusion to be
- pursued with great vigor through a combination of theory, speculation,
- numerical simulation, and direct testing of simulated deep-earth environment.
-
-
- 6. NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF ULTRA CAVITATION
-
- Ultra cavitation is a problem that fairly well begs for detailed numerical
- simulation, since many of the details of how and whether certain intensities
- can be reached will be dependent on behaviors that cannot be accurately
- estimated by manual methods.
-
- One interesting possibility for speeding the development of ultra-cavitation
- simulation programs could be to "borrow" features from simulations of other
- larger collapse phenomena, such as ion and laser confinement fusion, or
- possibly even supernova collapse simulations. However, highly tailored
- software would clearly be needed to accurately model this special class of
- collapses in which the final stages may involve a small number of atoms.
-
- Numeric simulation would also help wade through the potentially vast number
- of chemical and mechanical parameters that could be modified for ultra
- cavitation experiments, particularly in combination with experiments to
- identify interesting or unexpected regions of behavior.
-
-
- 7. SUMMARY
-
- In summary, it seems likely that the full range of temperatures and pressures
- available through the simple, well-known phenomenon of cavitation has yet to
- be fully explored. This paper has presented the premise that when cavitation
- is combined with a very hard void vacuum and a very high level of spherical
- symmetry, a significantly enhanced process that is referred to in this paper
- simply as "ultra cavitation" may extend obtainable pressures and temperatures
- into ranges normally reserved for intense plasma phenomena.
-
- Experimental verification of this very-high-end range of cavitation effects
- would be of great interest scientifically and perhaps practically, since it
- would mean that such very high pressures and temperatures could be obtained
- far more easily, and with far less complex equipment, than was previously
- thought possible.
-
- Finally, the possibility of naturally occurring ultra cavitation provides an
- intriguing possibility for experimental examination of the Jones et al
- hypothesis that planetary heating is in part the result of very-low-level
- fusion deep within the earth.
-
-
- 8. REFERENCES
-
- [1] Terry B. Bollinger (terry@asl.dl.nec.com), "In defense of Steven
- Jones." Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion, Message-ID:
- <1992Dec15.233802.16896@asl.dl.nec.com>, Date: Tue, 15 Dec 1992
- 23:38:02 GMT.
-
- [1] Terry B. Bollinger (terry@asl.dl.nec.com), "HICCUP Fusion."
- Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion, Message-ID:
- <1992Dec16.201708.26730@asl.dl.nec.com>, Date: Wed, 16 Dec 1992
- 20:17:08 GMT.
-
- [3] Steven E. Jones (jonesse@physc1.byu.edu), "Sonofusion at BYU."
- Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion, Message-ID:
- <1992Dec16.113342.285@physc1.byu.edu>, Date: 16 Dec 92 11:33:42 -0700.
-
- [4] Steven E. Jones (jonesse@physc1.byu.edu), "Sonoluminescence
- References." Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion, Message-ID:
- <1992Dec18.111410.294@physc1.byu.edu>, Date: 18 Dec 92 11:14:10 -0700
-
- [5] Private conversations with Jay Yow regarding his research work at UMR.
-
- [6] Private email from Tom Droege regarding ultrasound equipment.
-
- [7] B.P. Barber, S.J. Putterman, "Observation of synchronous picosecond
- SL," Nature, 352:318, 25 July 1991. [Reference provided by S. Jones.]
-
- [8] D.F. Gaitan, L.A. Crum, C.C. Church, R.A. Roy, "Sonoluminescence and
- bubble dynamics for a single, stable, cavitation bubble," J. Acoust.
- Soc. Am. 91(6): 3166 (June 1992). [Reference provided by S. Jones.]
-
- [9] R. Hiller, S.J. Putterman, B.P. Barber, "Spectrum of Synchronous
- Picosecond SL", Physical Rev. Letters, 69:1182 (24 Aug. 1992).
- [Reference provided by S. Jones.]
-
- [10] Tom Droege (DROEGE@FNALD.FNAL.GOV), "Misc." Newsgroups:
- sci.physics.fusion, Message-ID:<921221133431.20c01220@FNALD.FNAL.GOV>,
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 21:02:37 GMT
-
- [11] Steven E. Jones (jonesse@physc1.byu.ed), "Natural Fusion in Earth
- Hypothesis." Newsgroups: sci.physics.fusion, Message-ID:
- <1992Dec28.121139.306@physc1.byu.edu>, Date: 28 Dec 92 12:11:39 -0700.
-
-
- ---------- Copyrighted document ends with (and includes) this line -----------
-