Publication | Open Access
Cavitation Events in <i>Thuja occidentalis</i> L.?
185
Citations
0
References
1983
Year
Pressure BombAeroacousticsCavitation EventsVolcanologyEngineeringPhysicsUltrasonicsUltrasonic AePhysical AcousticUltrasonic Acoustic EmissionsApplied PhysicsUnderwater ExplosionSonoluminescenceLaharUltrasoundAcoustic Cavitation
Ultrasonic acoustic emissions (AE) in the frequency range of 0.1 to 1 megahertz appear to originate in the sapwood of Thuja occidentalis L. The AE are vibrations of an impulsive nature. The vibrations can be transduced to a voltage waveform and amplified. The vibrations of each AE event begin at a large amplitude which decays over 20 to 100 microseconds. Strong circumstantial evidence indicates that the ultrasonic AE result from cavitation events because: (a) they occur only when the xylem pressure potential Psi(xp) is more negative than a threshold level of about -1 megapascal; (b) the rate of AE events increases as Psi(xp) decreases and when the net rate of water loss increases; (c) the AE can be stopped by raising Psi(xp) above -1 megapascal. Ultrasonic AE have been measured in whole terminal shoots allowed to dry in the laboratory, in isolated pieces of sapwood as they dried in the laboratory, and in whole terminal shoots in a pressure bomb when Psi(xp) was decreased by lowering the gas pressure in the pressure bomb.