Measurement of Dynamic Interfacial Tension by an Expanding Drop Tensiometer
โ Scribed by R. Nagarajan; D.T. Wasan
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 416 KB
- Volume
- 159
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
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โฆ Synopsis
An accurate, nonintrusive method is described to measure the dynamic tension of dilated liquid-liquid interfaces. In this method, the time-dependent pressure difference across the curved interface of an expanding spherical drop, immersed in the second immiscible phase, was measured as a function of time. A sensitive apparatus employing this principle was constructed. Experiments were performed with a drop of dodecane expanding in an aqueous solution of a nonionic surfactant. In such a system, the dynamic interfacial tension depends upon the adsorption kinetics of the surfactant. A diffusion/adsorption model was formulated to describe the transport and exchange of surfactant species with the interface and the bulk phases. The analytical solution for this model was in good agreement with experimental data. The experiment also provided a direct value of the Gibbs elasticity. The noninvasiveness and the direct measurement of the capillary pressure make this technique an attractive and powerful tool. (1) 3993 Academic Press. Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
ARTICLE NO. CS974891 NOTE Effect of Neck Formation on the Measurement of Dynamic Interfacial Tension in a Drop Volume Tensiometer so that hydrodynamic effects can be neglected. Conditions under which neck formation may occur are studied, and a model is proposed to relate Dynamic interfacial tension
The retraction of a deformed drop back to the spherical, equilibrium shape at rest has been the subject of several studies in the literature with the aim of measuring the interfacial tension between the drop and the continuous phase. In this work, the retraction of a drop deformed under the action o
The maximum liquid drop volume (v(max)) is measured by using a back-suction micrometer syringe piston technique. Different very viscous liquids are measured by (v(max)) and (v(f)) methods to observe the effect of viscosity on tension measurement. No apparent viscosity effect was observed in surface