“…Apart from their applications in biomedicine, bubbles have also been used for texture tailoring in food industry [20], natural gas recovery in petroleum industry [21], material synthesis in material sciences [22], lab-on-a-chip devices [23], wastewater treatment systems [24], sonochemistry (enhancement and alternation of chemical reactions by means of ultrasound) [25,26], sonoprocessing [25,27] and underwater acoustic communication [28,29]. Moreover, it has been hypothesised that acoustic and fluid-mechanical properties of bubbles in the primordial ocean might contribute to the origin of life on Earth [30] and that the presence of bubbles in the brain and their collapse might be associated with blast-induced neurotraumas [31,32].…”