Nonlinear ultrasound in liquid containing multiple coated microbubbles: effect of buckling and rupture of viscoelastic shell on ultrasound propagation

Abstract

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>With promising applications in medical diagnosis and therapy, the behavior of shell-encapsula-ted ultrasound contrast agents (UCAs) has attracted considerable attention. Currently, second-generation contrast agents stabilized by a phospholipid membrane are widely used and studies have focused on the dynamics of single phospholipid shell-encapsulated microbubbles. To improve the safety and the efficiency of the methods using the propagation or targeted ultrasound, a better understanding of the propagation of ultrasound in liquids containing multiple encapsulated microbubbles is required. By incorporating the Marmottant–Gompertz model into the multiple scale analysis of two-phase model, this study derived a Korteweg–de Vries–Burgers equation as a weakly nonlinear wave equation for one-dimensional ultrasound in bubbly liquids. It was found that the wave propagation characteristics changed with the initial surface tension, highlighting two notable features of the phospholipid shell: buckling and rupture. These results may provide insights into the suitable state of microbubbles, and better control of ultrasound for medical applications, particularly those that require high precision.</jats:p>

Journal

  • Nonlinear Dynamics

    Nonlinear Dynamics 111 (12), 10859-10877, 2023-04-26

    Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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