Surface Tension of Pure Water at Air/Water and Oil/Water Interfaces

Keyword(s):  
2007 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 6077-6112
Author(s):  
T. Anttila ◽  
V.-M. Kerminen

Abstract. Aitken mode particles are potentially an important source of cloud droplets in continental background areas. In order to find out which physico-chemical properties of Aitken mode particles are most important regarding their cloud-nucleating ability, we applied a global sensitivity method to an adiabatic air parcel model simulating the number of cloud droplets formed on Aitken mode particles, CD2. The technique propagates uncertainties in the parameters describing the properties of Aitken mode to CD2. The results show that if the Aitken mode particles do not contain molecules that are able to reduce the particle surface tension more than 30% and/or decrease the mass accommodation coefficient of water, α, below 10−2, the chemical composition and modal properties may have roughly an equal importance at low updraft velocities characterized by maximum supersaturations <0.1%. For larger updraft velocities, however, the particle size distribution is clearly more important than the chemical composition. In general, CD2 exhibits largest sensitivity to the particle number concentration, followed by the particle size. Also the shape of the particle mode, characterized by the geometric standard deviation (GSD), can be as important as the mode mean size at low updraft velocities. Finally, the performed sensitivity analysis revealed also that the chemistry may dominate the total sensitivity of CD2 to the considered parameters if: 1) the value of α varies at least one order of magnitude more than what is expected for pure water surfaces (10−2–1), or 2) the particle surface tension varies more than roughly 30% under conditions close to reaching supersaturation.


2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 15595-15640 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. R. Ruehl ◽  
P. Y. Chuang ◽  
A. Nenes

Abstract. The hygroscopicity of an aerosol largely determines its influence on climate and, for smaller particles, atmospheric lifetime. While much aerosol hygroscopicity data is available at lower relative humidities (RH) and under cloud formation conditions (RH>100%), relatively little data is available at high RH (99.2 to 99.9%). We measured the size of droplets at high RH that had formed on particles composed of one of seven compounds with dry diameters between 0.1 and 0.5 μm, and calculated the hygroscopicity of these compounds. We use a parameterization of the Kelvin term, in addition to a standard parameterization (κ) of the Raoult term, to express the hygroscopicity of surface-active compounds. For inorganic compounds, hygroscopicity could reliably be predicted using water activity data and assuming a surface tension of pure water. In contrast, most organics exhibited a slight to mild increase in hygroscopicity with droplet diameter. This trend was strongest for sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), the most surface-active compound studied. The results suggest that partitioning of surface-active compounds away from the bulk solution, which reduces hygroscopicity, dominates any increases in hygroscopicity due to reduced surface tension. This is opposite to what is typically assumed for soluble surfactants. Furthermore, we saw no evidence that micellization limits SDS activity in micron-sized solution droplets, as observed in macroscopic solutions. These results suggest that while the high-RH hygroscopicity of inorganic compounds can be reliably predicted using readily available data, surface-activity parameters obtained from macroscopic solutions with organic solutes may be inappropriate for calculations of the hygroscopicity of micron-sized droplets.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Yidan Jiang ◽  
Pengfei Wang ◽  
Ronghua Liu ◽  
Ye Pei ◽  
Gaogao Wu

Surfactants can improve the wetting performance of the dust-reduction spraying water, thus improving the dust-reduction effect by spray. In this study, the performance of surfactant solution in wetting coal dust was investigated through experiments. In addition, the effects of surfactant type, mass fraction, metamorphic degree of coal, particle size, and additives were investigated. According to the results of surface tension experiments, the surface tension of the solution decreased with the increase of the concentration of surfactant. However, after reaching CMC, the surface tension did not have significantly decrease. SDBS and OP-10 had higher efficiency in decreasing the surface tension than the other two types of surfactants. The addition of sodium sulfate additives can further reduce the surface tension of the surfactant solution by a limited range. The coal dust wetting experiment showed that with the increase in the concentration of the surfactant, the contact angle of the droplets on the coal dust tablet was continuously reduced, and the wettability of the solution was continuously improved. The wettability of the OP-10 solution was optimal. At the same concentration, the minimum contact angle can be obtained in the OP-10 solution. As the contact angle of the coal dust increased, the growth rate in the coal dust reverse osmosis moisture absorption of the surfactant solution relative to the pure water increased. After the addition of sodium sulfate, the reverse osmosis moisture absorption of coal dust increased to varying degrees. In addition, as the concentration of additives increased, the moisture absorption of coal dust increased.


BIBECHANA ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 77-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chom Nath Adhikari ◽  
G S Shrivastav ◽  
Ajaya Bhattarai

Viscosity and surface tension measurements of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) in presence and absence of Na2SO4 and MgSO4 in aqueous media are reported. The results showed an increase in viscosity with increase in concentration of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide in presence and absence of salts where as the decrease in surface tension with increase in concentration of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide in presence and absence of salts. The viscosity of CTAB was observed lowest in pure water and increases in presence of MgSO4 and then more increases in presence of Na2SO4 where as the surface tension of CTAB was observed highest in pure water and decreases in presence of Na2SO4 and then more decreases in presence of MgSO4.The critical micelle concentration (cmc) of CTAB decreases in presence of salts in both viscosity and surface tension measurements. The decreasing cmc of CTAB are found to be more in the presence of Na2SO4 in comparison with the presence of MgSO4 for both measurements. The graphs of viscosity versus log[C] and the surface tension versus log[C] are used in determining the critical micelle concentration (cmc).        BIBECHANA 14 (2017) 77-85


Author(s):  
Milind A. Jog ◽  
Raj M. Manglik

The post-impact spreading and recoil behaviors of droplets of pure liquids (water and ethanol) and aqueous solution of Triton X-100 (a surfactant) on a dry horizontal hydrophilic (glass) substrate are investigated for low Weber numbers. The evolution of drop shape during spreading and recoil are captured using a high-speed (4,000 frames per second) digital video camera. Digital image-processing was used to determine the spread and height of the liquid film on the surface from each frame. Unlike pure liquids, the liquid-gas interfacial tension for surfactant solution is a function of surface age, where surface tension is that of the solvent at zero time and then reaches an equilibrium value with increasing surface age. Furthermore, the equilibrium surface tension is a function of the surfactant concentration, which decreases from that of the solvent at zero concentration to that at the critical micelle concentration (CMC), and remains essentially constant thereafter. The surface tension of aqueous Triton X-100 solution varies from that of pure water to nearly that of ethanol. As such the comparison of transient droplet-impact-spreading-recoil behavior of the three liquids, or their temporal variations of the spread and the flattening factor, provides a basis for understanding the role of dynamic surface tension and surface wettability.


2011 ◽  
Vol 383-390 ◽  
pp. 826-829 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dao Zhen Xu ◽  
Guo Zhong Zhang ◽  
Xin Zhang

The stratified water-oil two—phase flow was modeled using VOF method in horizontal pipe and surface tension was taken into consideration using CSF model. It was found that the surface tension had great impact on the small density difference two-phase flow even in large diameter pipe, which would lead the interface curved and pressure gradient increased.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 5625-5639 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. O. Fors ◽  
J. Rissler ◽  
A. Massling ◽  
B. Svenningsson ◽  
M. O. Andreae ◽  
...  

Abstract. HUmic-LIke Substances (HULIS) have been identified as major contributors to the organic carbon in atmospheric aerosol. The term "HULIS" is used to describe the organic material found in aerosol particles that resembles the humic organic material in rivers and sea water and in soils. In this study, two sets of filter samples from atmospheric aerosols were collected at different sites. One set of samples was collected at the K-puszta rural site in Hungary, about 80 km SE of Budapest, and a second was collected at a site in Rondônia, Amazonia, Brazil, during the Large-Scale Biosphere-Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia – Smoke Aerosols, Clouds, Rainfall and Climate (LBA-SMOCC) biomass burning season experiment. HULIS were extracted from the samples and their hygroscopic properties were studied using a Hygroscopicity Tandem Differential Mobility Analyzer (H-TDMA) at relative humidity (RH) <100%, and a cloud condensation nucleus counter (CCNC) at RH >100%. The H-TDMA measurements were carried out at a dry diameter of 100 nm and for RH ranging from 30 to 98%. At 90% RH the HULIS samples showed diameter growth factors between 1.04 and 1.07, reaching values of 1.4 at 98% RH. The cloud nucleating properties of the two sets of aerosol samples were analysed using two types of thermal static cloud condensation nucleus counters. Two different parameterization models were applied to investigate the potential effect of HULIS surface activity, both yielding similar results. For the K-puszta winter HULIS sample, the surface tension at the point of activation was estimated to be lowered by between 34% (47.7 mN/m) and 31% (50.3 mN/m) for dry sizes between 50 and 120 nm in comparison to pure water. A moderate lowering was also observed for the entire water soluble aerosol sample, including both organic and inorganic compounds, where the surface tension was decreased by between 2% (71.2 mN/m) and 13% (63.3 mN/m).


RSC Advances ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (26) ◽  
pp. 15964-15970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paola Calcagnile ◽  
Tommaso Dattoma ◽  
Elisa Scarpa ◽  
Antonio Qualtieri ◽  
Laura Blasi ◽  
...  

Parylene C-based 2D STC fluidics, where pure water and water-based solutions can flow strictly confined by differences in surface energy.


Author(s):  
Shotaro Nishiguchi ◽  
Naoki Ono ◽  
Masahiro Shoji

Aqueous solutions of some alcohols such as butanol show peculiar temperature dependence of surface tension. Contrary to ordinary liquids or solutions, the surface tension increases with temperature at the range of high liquid temperature. So at the triple-phase point on a heated surface, the thermo-capillary force acts for the liquid to wet the heated surface, so the solutions are sometimes called as “self-wetting liquids”. Self-wetting liquids may prohibit the dry-out of a heated surface so that the heat transfer performance would be enhanced. For this reason, applications of self-wetting liquids to heat transfer devices such as heat pipes are actively studied in recent years. However, the heat transfer characteristics of boiling of self-wetting liquids are not fully understood. In the present research, a boiling experiment of butanol aqueous solution was performed on a heated fine wire in order to make clear the fundamental heat transfer characteristics. A heated wire configuration is easy to observe the phenomena and easy to address the fundamental issues of boiling. In the present experiment, nucleate boiling heat transfer were investigated with special attention to critical heat flux (CHF), by changing solution concentration and temperature. Bubbling aspects were observed by high-speed video camera. It is found from the experiment that CHF is generally enhanced 20 to 50% when compared to the case of pure water. It is also found that at a certain concentration and at a certain liquid temperature, peculiar boiling takes place where very small bubbles are emitted from the heated wire and CHF enhancement becomes very large from 2 to 3 times higher than CHF of pure water. The temperature when the peculiar boiling takes place is close to boiling temperature of the solution. These results suggest the possibility of application of aqueous solution to high-performance cooling devices utilizing micro-scaled channels because generating bubbles are small enough so that the pressure loss of the flow passage is small and heat transfer rate is very large.


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