Sonochemistry: Scope, Limitations… and Artifacts

Authors

  • Yves Kegelaers
  • Jean-Luc Delplancke
  • Jacques Reisse

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2533/chimia.2000.48

Keywords:

Cost, Sonochemistry

Abstract

Heterogeneous sonochemistry, generally described as the most useful aspect of sonochemistry, suffers from the difficulty of defining the experimental conditions for the reference (silent) reaction. Clearly the use of an efficient agitation system for the silent reaction strongly reduces the value of the so-called sonochemical effect, which becomes in some cases, less than 1 (anti-sonochemical effect!).The 'cleaning' effect of ultrasound is extremely efficient to expel micro-crystals from the surface of an electrode which is simultaneously an immersion ultrasonic horn. By sending out-of-phase electric pulses and acoustic pulses, new nano materials (metals, alloys, semiconductors, oxides) are easily prepared in high purity.

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Published

2000-02-23

Issue

Section

ILMAC 99: Retrospective/ILMAC Congress

How to Cite

[1]
Y. Kegelaers, J.-L. Delplancke, J. Reisse, Chimia 2000, 54, 48, DOI: 10.2533/chimia.2000.48.