Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4992681 Experimental Thermal and Fluid Science 2017 29 Pages PDF
Abstract
The property interfacial tension between liquid-liquid interfaces is a crucial quantity on the study and characterization of emulsion flow rheology. The use of surfactant molecules on a membrane avoids for instance coalescence of the oil droplets by reducing the interfacial tension of the mixture. A transient effect occurs due to the redistribution of the surfactant molecules at the liquid-liquid interface. The present work carries out interfacial tension measurement as a function of the continuous phase components volume fraction which is equivalent to a liquid-liquid interface of different viscosity ratios. The dependence of the interfacial tension on the volume fraction of surfactants is also examined. The experiments are carried out in a drop volume tensiometer, based on the balance between buoyancy and capillary forces on a drop that is detached from the edge of a capillary tube. The interfacial tension between mineral oil drop and a glycerol/water solution is then measured for several values of glycerol volume fractions. The interfacial tension between an oil drop and water is also measured for various concentrations of the Span 80 (i.e. lipophilic surfactant) and Tween 80 (i.e. hydrophilic surfactant). Correlation functions are proposed in order to fit the experimental data. The equilibrium time of the surfactant distribution by the mechanisms of adsorption and by the Marangoni stresses resulting from the flow-induced surface tension gradients on the drop surface and the corresponding equilibrium interfacial tension are used as parameters of the correlations. The results show that the relaxation time for the surfactant distribution reaching steady state decreases with surfactant volume fraction. We determine experimentally the critical value of the surfactant volume fraction and its associated relaxation time. We obtain the minimum surfactant concentration to be used in order to guarantee a faster relaxation of the interfacial tension. The surfactant interfacial properties are estimated and related to their structure.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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