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1. Verfasser: Asano, Yuta
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.13594
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author Asano, Yuta
author_facet Asano, Yuta
contents A large-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of acoustic cavitation in a simple liquid was performed using the supercomputer Fugaku. The system, consisting of approximately 100 billion atoms, was subjected to ultrasonic irradiation. Direct observation of multi-bubble dynamics has been challenging in both experimental measurements and conventional numerical fluid mechanics simulations. Moreover, previous MD simulations involving only hundreds of millions of atoms were unable to generate multiple bubbles within a system. Our results reveal that cavitation bubbles nucleate and grow near the ultrasonic horn, forming a large bubble cluster that periodically splits into multiple small clusters and subsequently merges again. This cycle is synchronized with the oscillation period of the horn. Pressure and temperature inside the bubbles exhibit sharp increases during cluster fragmentation, and their oscillation amplitudes vary on a timescale longer than the driving period of the horn, indicating the presence of subharmonic behavior consistent with experimental observations. Despite bubble formation, the effect on the acoustic properties of the sound wave was almost negligible, indicating that cavitation near the horn surface has limited influence on bulk acoustic properties. These findings provide new insights into the molecular-scale mechanisms of cavitation and offer guidance for optimizing ultrasonic systems in chemical and biomedical applications. Future work will focus on quantifying long-period oscillations, analyzing attenuation effects, and extending simulations to complex fluids.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_13594
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle 100-Billion-Atom Molecular Dynamics Simulation of Acoustic Cavitation in a Simple Liquid
Asano, Yuta
Fluid Dynamics
A large-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of acoustic cavitation in a simple liquid was performed using the supercomputer Fugaku. The system, consisting of approximately 100 billion atoms, was subjected to ultrasonic irradiation. Direct observation of multi-bubble dynamics has been challenging in both experimental measurements and conventional numerical fluid mechanics simulations. Moreover, previous MD simulations involving only hundreds of millions of atoms were unable to generate multiple bubbles within a system. Our results reveal that cavitation bubbles nucleate and grow near the ultrasonic horn, forming a large bubble cluster that periodically splits into multiple small clusters and subsequently merges again. This cycle is synchronized with the oscillation period of the horn. Pressure and temperature inside the bubbles exhibit sharp increases during cluster fragmentation, and their oscillation amplitudes vary on a timescale longer than the driving period of the horn, indicating the presence of subharmonic behavior consistent with experimental observations. Despite bubble formation, the effect on the acoustic properties of the sound wave was almost negligible, indicating that cavitation near the horn surface has limited influence on bulk acoustic properties. These findings provide new insights into the molecular-scale mechanisms of cavitation and offer guidance for optimizing ultrasonic systems in chemical and biomedical applications. Future work will focus on quantifying long-period oscillations, analyzing attenuation effects, and extending simulations to complex fluids.
title 100-Billion-Atom Molecular Dynamics Simulation of Acoustic Cavitation in a Simple Liquid
topic Fluid Dynamics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.13594