Micro-nano Bubble Technology: Basic Principles and Applications

31/03/2026

1. What Are Micro-nano Bubbles?

Let’s start with something we all know.

Regular bubbles rise. They pop at the surface. That’s it.

Micro-nano bubbles are different. They are so small that they don’t float up. They stay in the water. Sometimes for months.

  • Microbubbles = 1 to 100 μm (like a speck of dust)
  • Nanobubbles = less than 200 nm (invisible even under a regular microscope)

Because they are tiny, they behave strangely. They sink. They carry an electric charge. And when they finally collapse, they produce powerful cleaning agents called hydroxyl radicals.

Real-world example:
A Japanese research institute (AIST) kept saltwater and freshwater fish alive together in the same tank using nanobubbles. That was impossible before.

Diagram comparing regular bubble rising and popping vs micro-nano bubble staying suspended in water

2. Basic Principles – How Do They Actually Work?

You don’t need a physics degree to understand this. Here are the four key principles.

They Don’t Rise (Stokes’ Law)

Big bubbles rise fast. Small bubbles rise slowly.
Micro-nano bubbles rise so slowly that water currents win. They just drift. This keeps them in contact with pollutants or roots for a long time.

Huge Surface Area

A small bubble has much more surface area for the same amount of gas.
That means oxygen, ozone, or CO₂ transfers into water almost instantly. No waste.

Electric Charge (Zeta Potential)

Illustration showing negatively charged nanobubbles attracting positively charged dirt and bacteria

Most micro-nano bubbles carry a negative charge (around −30 to −45 mV).

Why does that matter?
Because dirt, bacteria, and oil droplets are often positively charged. Opposites attract. The bubbles pull contaminants out of the water like tiny magnets.

This charge also stops bubbles from merging. That’s why they stay stable for weeks.

Collapse & Free Radicals

Diagram of nanobubble collapse releasing hydroxyl radicals that break down PFAS and pharmaceuticals

When a nanobubble finally collapses, the pressure inside is enormous.
At the last moment, it creates hydroxyl radicals (·OH) – one of the strongest oxidizers known.

Hydroxyl radicals break down:

  • pesticides
  • pharmaceuticals
  • even PFAS (forever chemicals)

No chemicals added. Just water, gas, and physics.

Source: Studies from Korea and Japan have confirmed hydroxyl radical generation from collapsing nanobubbles (e.g., Takahashi et al., 2007; Liu et al., 2016).


3. How Are Micro-nano Bubbles Made?

There is no single machine. Different methods exist for different jobs.

Three types of micro-nano bubble generators: Venturi, pressurized dissolution, and ultrasonic cavitation
MethodHow it worksBest for
Pressurized dissolutionGas is forced into water under pressure, then releasedIndustrial water treatment
Venturi injectorWater rushes through a narrow gap, sucking in gasLow-cost, farming, aquaculture
Ultrasonic cavitationSound waves create and collapse bubblesLab research, fine cleaning
Spinning diskRotor cuts gas into tiny bubblesMining, flotation

Most real-world systems use venturi or pressurized dissolution because they are reliable and energy-efficient.


4. Real Applications – Where Are They Used Today?

Real application: nanobubbles in crop irrigation root zone and oil-water separation flotation

This is not lab fantasy. These are working applications.

🌾 Agriculture

Roots need oxygen. Without it, plants suffocate.

Oxygen nanobubbles stay in irrigation water for weeks. They keep the root zone oxygenated.
Results from field trials:

  • 10–30% higher crop yields (tomatoes, lettuce, strawberries)
  • Less root rot
  • Lower fertilizer use

Example: A South African aquaponics farm reported a 50% productivity increase after switching to nanobubble irrigation.

💧 Water & Wastewater Treatment

Chemical-free cleaning is the future.

Oil-water separation 

– bubbles attach to oil and float it to the surface.

Ozone nanobubbles 

– ozone stays active for months (normally minutes). It kills bacteria and breaks down drugs and dyes.

Lake restoration 

– oxygen nanobubbles stop algae blooms without toxic chemicals.

🐟 Aquaculture

High-density fish farming has two big problems: low oxygen and toxic ammonia.

Oxygen nanobubbles solve both. They keep dissolved oxygen at over 100% saturation and help good bacteria remove ammonia.

🏥 Biomedicine (emerging)

This is earlier stage but promising.

Nanobubbles are small enough to travel through the bloodstream.
In experiments, doctors use ultrasound to pop them inside tumors. This opens cell walls just enough to let chemotherapy drugs in.

Also used for ultrasonic cleaning of surgical tools – no detergents needed.


5. Benefits Summary

BenefitWhat it means
No chemicalsSafer for people and environment
Low energyVenturi systems use little extra power
Long stabilityNanobubbles last weeks, not seconds
High gas transferAlmost 100% of gas is used
Oxidizing powerBreaks down pollutants other methods miss

6. Limitations

No technology is perfect.

  • Scaling up is hard – making very small bubbles in large volumes still costs energy.
  • Measurement is tricky – nanobubbles are hard to count and track in real time.
  • Long-term field data is still growing – many studies are still lab-based.

That said, the direction is clear. Costs are dropping. Adoption is rising.

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