Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus

Liquid–liquid interfacial tension plays a crucial role in multiphase systems in the chemical industry. The available measurement methods for liquid–liquid interfacial tension are poorly suited to low bond number systems, which are often found in industrial processes. This study developed and verifie...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hyde, A., Phan, Chi, Ingram, Gordon
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier BV 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23027
_version_ 1848751036789948416
author Hyde, A.
Phan, Chi
Ingram, Gordon
author_facet Hyde, A.
Phan, Chi
Ingram, Gordon
author_sort Hyde, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Liquid–liquid interfacial tension plays a crucial role in multiphase systems in the chemical industry. The available measurement methods for liquid–liquid interfacial tension are poorly suited to low bond number systems, which are often found in industrial processes. This study developed and verified anew method of calculating the interfacial tension of liquid–liquid systems by using the “submerged holm” meniscus. The holm meridian was experimentally formed around a solid object submerged at the interface. A program was developed in MATLAB to calculate the interfacial tension from the submerged holm meridian. The interfacial tension calculated by the new method was found to be consistent with available data for multiple oil–water systems. This is the first time the submerged holm meniscus has been used successfully for determining interfacial tension. More importantly, the method is applicable to liquid–liquid systems with a small density difference between the two phases. As a demonstration, the interfacial tension of silicone oil (1000 cP) – water was measured, where the difference in density was less than 30 kg/m3 (3%). The method is potentially suitable for processes involving hazardous or unstable chemicals, elevated pressure or temperature.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:46:21Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-23027
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:46:21Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Elsevier BV
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-230272017-09-13T13:57:43Z Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus Hyde, A. Phan, Chi Ingram, Gordon Interfacial tension Digital image analysis Young–Laplace equation Optical tensiometry Liquid–liquid interfacial tension plays a crucial role in multiphase systems in the chemical industry. The available measurement methods for liquid–liquid interfacial tension are poorly suited to low bond number systems, which are often found in industrial processes. This study developed and verified anew method of calculating the interfacial tension of liquid–liquid systems by using the “submerged holm” meniscus. The holm meridian was experimentally formed around a solid object submerged at the interface. A program was developed in MATLAB to calculate the interfacial tension from the submerged holm meridian. The interfacial tension calculated by the new method was found to be consistent with available data for multiple oil–water systems. This is the first time the submerged holm meniscus has been used successfully for determining interfacial tension. More importantly, the method is applicable to liquid–liquid systems with a small density difference between the two phases. As a demonstration, the interfacial tension of silicone oil (1000 cP) – water was measured, where the difference in density was less than 30 kg/m3 (3%). The method is potentially suitable for processes involving hazardous or unstable chemicals, elevated pressure or temperature. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23027 10.1016/j.colsurfa.2014.07.016 Elsevier BV restricted
spellingShingle Interfacial tension
Digital image analysis
Young–Laplace equation
Optical tensiometry
Hyde, A.
Phan, Chi
Ingram, Gordon
Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
title Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
title_full Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
title_fullStr Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
title_full_unstemmed Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
title_short Determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
title_sort determining liquid–liquid interfacial tension from a submerged meniscus
topic Interfacial tension
Digital image analysis
Young–Laplace equation
Optical tensiometry
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23027