Spontaneous Liquid/Liquid Displacement in a Capillary
โ Scribed by Pieter Van Remoortere; Paul Joos
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 371 KB
- Volume
- 160
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-9797
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
When a two-phase column consisting of paraffin oil and silicon oil is placed in an otherwise air-filled, horizontal glass capillary, the column starts moving spontaneously. Silicon oil displaces paraffin oil, which in its turn displaces air at atmospheric conditions; a stable film of silicon oil is left at the receding silicon oil/air meniscus. The driving force for the motion is the difference in capillary pressure at the free interfaces. However, the column moves considerably more slowly than predicted by the driving forces; it appears that the forces resisting the motion at the moving liquid/liquid/solid line are much larger than one would expect on the basis of the interfacial tension and the viscosities of the two phase system. Some considerations are made on the relationship of the theory of Fowkes to our system. Also, a method for measuring low interfacial tensions between immiscible liquids is proposed. @ 1993 Academic Press, Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Virk, P. S., "An Elastic Sublayer Model for Drag Reduction by Dilute Polymer Solutions of Linear Macromolecules," j .
A critical review of the problem of spontaneous penetration of a wetting liquid into pore channels shows that no theory exists to quantitatively predict the initial stage of imbibition. Since C. H. Bosanquet (1923, Phil. Mag. 45, 525), the theory operates with an universal velocity U Bosanquet = (2ฮณ