Hi Harish, please clarify if you mean micro- (fine) or nano- (ultrafine) bubbles. I believe the definition of a nanobubble according to the Fine Bubble Industries Association and in research documented in Hideki Tsuge's Micro- and Nanobubbles: Fundamentals and Applications is bubble size between 300nm and 1 micron.  I find the claim of 7/8 times more powerful than ozone hard to believe. How exactly do you measure this?  I agree nanobubbles will significantly reduce energy costs for gas to liquid transfer and should be investigated in this regard.

Published by Andrew Tran, Engineer

Hi Harish, please clarify if you mean micro- (fine) or nano- (ultrafine) bubbles. I believe the definition of a nanobubble according to the Fine Bubble Industries Association and in research documented in Hideki Tsuge's Micro- and Nanobubbles: Fundamentals and Applications is bubble size between 300nm and 1 micron. 

I find the claim of 7/8 times more powerful than ozone hard to believe. How exactly do you measure this? 

I agree nanobubbles will significantly reduce energy costs for gas to liquid transfer and should be investigated in this regard.