cavitations
Cavitations, in fluid dynamics, refers to the formation, growth, and implosive collapse of vapor-filled cavities or bubbles in a liquid. It occurs when local pressures fall below the liquid’s vapor pressure, or when a liquid experiences rapid pressure changes. Nuclei such as dissolved gas, impurities, or pre-existing microbubbles provide sites for bubble formation. Cavitation is common in fast-flowing fluids and can occur in natural settings as well as in engineered equipment such as pumps and propellers.
Bubble dynamics proceed through initiation at low pressure, subsequent growth while the driving pressure remains low,
Impacts of cavitation include noise and vibration, reduced efficiency, and material damage from imploding bubbles. Erosion
Applications and mitigation: Cavitation is exploited in ultrasonic cleaning and sonochemistry, where bubble activity assists surface