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Capillary Rise: Validity of the Dynamic Contact Angle Models. | LitMetric

Capillary Rise: Validity of the Dynamic Contact Angle Models.

Langmuir

Department of Chemical Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois 60616, United States.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • The classical LWR equation predicts capillary rise too quickly compared to experimental results, primarily due to not accounting for the velocity-dependent dynamic contact angle.
  • The study tested various dynamic contact angle models by conducting capillary rise experiments with different wetting liquids in glass capillaries, revealing that modified LWR equations provided better predictions for most liquids.
  • Notably, the molecular self-layering model showed significant advantages in accurately predicting capillary rise behaviors, especially for silicone oils and other liquids, highlighting the role of thin wetting films in dynamic contact angle effects.

Article Abstract

The classical Lucas-Washburn-Rideal (LWR) equation, using the equilibrium contact angle, predicts a faster capillary rise process than experiments in many cases. The major contributor to the faster prediction is believed to be the velocity dependent dynamic contact angle. In this work, we investigated the dynamic contact angle models for their ability to correct the dynamic contact angle effect in the capillary rise process. We conducted capillary rise experiments of various wetting liquids in borosilicate glass capillaries and compared the model predictions with our experimental data. The results show that the LWR equations modified by the molecular kinetic theory and hydrodynamic model provide good predictions on the capillary rise of all the testing liquids with fitting parameters, while the one modified by Joos' empirical equation works for specific liquids, such as silicone oils. The LWR equation modified by molecular self-layering model predicts well the capillary rise of carbon tetrachloride, octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane, and n-alkanes with the molecular diameter or measured solvation force data. The molecular self-layering model modified LWR equation also has good predictions on the capillary rise of silicone oils covering a wide range of bulk viscosities with the same key parameter W(0), which results from the molecular self-layering. The advantage of the molecular self-layering model over the other models reveals the importance of the layered molecularly thin wetting film ahead of the main meniscus in the energy dissipation associated with dynamic contact angle. The analysis of the capillary rise of silicone oils with a wide range of bulk viscosities provides new insights into the capillary dynamics of polymer melts.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.7b01762DOI Listing

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