![Surface tension](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi83Lzc3L1JhaW5Ecm9wczEuanBnLzE2MDBweC1SYWluRHJvcHMxLmpwZw==.jpg )
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Surface tension is the tendency of liquid surfaces at rest to shrink into the minimum surface area possible. Surface tension is what allows objects with a higher density than water such as razor blades and insects (e.g. water striders) to float on a water surface without becoming even partly submerged.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODNMemMzTDFKaGFXNUVjbTl3Y3pFdWFuQm5MekkyTUhCNExWSmhhVzVFY205d2N6RXVhbkJuLmpwZw==.jpg)
At liquid–air interfaces, surface tension results from the greater attraction of liquid molecules to each other (due to cohesion) than to the molecules in the air (due to adhesion).
There are two primary mechanisms in play. One is an inward force on the surface molecules causing the liquid to contract. Second is a tangential force parallel to the surface of the liquid. This tangential force is generally referred to as the surface tension. The net effect is the liquid behaves as if its surface were covered with a stretched elastic membrane. But this analogy must not be taken too far as the tension in an elastic membrane is dependent on the amount of deformation of the membrane while surface tension is an inherent property of the liquid–air or liquid–vapour interface.
Because of the relatively high attraction of water molecules to each other through a web of hydrogen bonds, water has a higher surface tension (72.8 millinewtons (mN) per meter at 20 °C) than most other liquids. Surface tension is an important factor in the phenomenon of capillarity.
Surface tension has the dimension of force per unit length, or of energy per unit area. The two are equivalent, but when referring to energy per unit of area, it is common to use the term surface energy, which is a more general term in the sense that it applies also to solids.
In materials science, surface tension is used for either surface stress or surface energy.
Causes
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlk1TDFkaGMzTmxjbTF2YkdWckpVTXpKVUpEYkdWSmJsUnlKVU16SlVJMmNHWmphR1Z1TG5OMlp5OHlNakJ3ZUMxWFlYTnpaWEp0YjJ4bGF5VkRNeVZDUTJ4bFNXNVVjaVZETXlWQ05uQm1ZMmhsYmk1emRtY3VjRzVuLnBuZw==.png)
Due to the cohesive forces, a molecule located away from the surface is pulled equally in every direction by neighboring liquid molecules, resulting in a net force of zero. The molecules at the surface do not have the same molecules on all sides of them and therefore are pulled inward. This creates some internal pressure and forces liquid surfaces to contract to the minimum area.
There is also a tension parallel to the surface at the liquid-air interface which will resist an external force, due to the cohesive nature of water molecules.
The forces of attraction acting between molecules of the same type are called cohesive forces, while those acting between molecules of different types are called adhesive forces. The balance between the cohesion of the liquid and its adhesion to the material of the container determines the degree of wetting, the contact angle, and the shape of meniscus. When cohesion dominates (specifically, adhesion energy is less than half of cohesion energy) the wetting is low and the meniscus is convex at a vertical wall (as for mercury in a glass container). On the other hand, when adhesion dominates (when adhesion energy is more than half of cohesion energy) the wetting is high and the similar meniscus is concave (as in water in a glass).
Surface tension is responsible for the shape of liquid droplets. Although easily deformed, droplets of water tend to be pulled into a spherical shape by the imbalance in cohesive forces of the surface layer. In the absence of other forces, drops of virtually all liquids would be approximately spherical. The spherical shape minimizes the necessary "wall tension" of the surface layer according to Laplace's law.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelEyTDFkaGRHVnlYMlJ5YjNCc1pYUmZiSGxwYm1kZmIyNWZZVjlrWVcxaGMyc3VhbkJuTHpJeU1IQjRMVmRoZEdWeVgyUnliM0JzWlhSZmJIbHBibWRmYjI1ZllWOWtZVzFoYzJzdWFuQm4uanBn.jpg)
Another way to view surface tension is in terms of energy. A molecule in contact with a neighbor is in a lower state of energy than if it were alone. The interior molecules have as many neighbors as they can possibly have, but the boundary molecules are missing neighbors (compared to interior molecules) and therefore have higher energy. For the liquid to minimize its energy state, the number of higher energy boundary molecules must be minimized. The minimized number of boundary molecules results in a minimal surface area. As a result of surface area minimization, a surface will assume a smooth shape.
Physics
Physical units
Surface tension, represented by the symbol γ (alternatively σ or T), is measured in force per unit length. Its SI unit is newton per meter but the cgs unit of dyne per centimeter is also used. For example,
Definition
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlkzTDFOMWNtWmhZMlZmWjNKdmQybHVaeTV3Ym1jdk1qSXdjSGd0VTNWeVptRmpaVjluY205M2FXNW5MbkJ1Wnc9PS5wbmc=.png)
Surface tension can be defined in terms of force or energy.
In terms of force
Surface tension γ of a liquid is the force per unit length. In the illustration on the right, the rectangular frame, composed of three unmovable sides (black) that form a "U" shape, and a fourth movable side (blue) that can slide to the right. Surface tension will pull the blue bar to the left; the force F required to hold the movable side is proportional to the length L of the immobile side. Thus the ratio F/L depends only on the intrinsic properties of the liquid (composition, temperature, etc.), not on its geometry. For example, if the frame had a more complicated shape, the ratio F/L, with L the length of the movable side and F the force required to stop it from sliding, is found to be the same for all shapes. We therefore define the surface tension as
The reason for the 1/2 is that the film has two sides (two surfaces), each of which contributes equally to the force; so the force contributed by a single side is γL = F/2.
In terms of energy
Surface tension γ of a liquid is the ratio of the change in the energy of the liquid to the change in the surface area of the liquid (that led to the change in energy). This can be easily related to the previous definition in terms of force: if F is the force required to stop the side from starting to slide, then this is also the force that would keep the side in the state of sliding at a constant speed (by Newton's Second Law). But if the side is moving to the right (in the direction the force is applied), then the surface area of the stretched liquid is increasing while the applied force is doing work on the liquid. This means that increasing the surface area increases the energy of the film. The work done by the force F in moving the side by distance Δx is W = FΔx; at the same time the total area of the film increases by ΔA = 2LΔx (the factor of 2 is here because the liquid has two sides, two surfaces). Thus, multiplying both the numerator and the denominator of γ = 1/2F/L by Δx, we get This work W is, by the usual arguments, interpreted as being stored as potential energy. Consequently, surface tension can be also measured in SI system as joules per square meter and in the cgs system as ergs per cm2. Since mechanical systems try to find a state of minimum potential energy, a free droplet of liquid naturally assumes a spherical shape, which has the minimum surface area for a given volume. The equivalence of measurement of energy per unit area to force per unit length can be proven by dimensional analysis.
Effects
Water
Several effects of surface tension can be seen with ordinary water:
- Beading of rain water on a waxy surface, such as a leaf. Water adheres weakly to wax and strongly to itself, so water clusters into drops. Surface tension gives them their near-spherical shape, because a sphere has the smallest possible surface area to volume ratio.
- Formation of drops occurs when a mass of liquid is stretched. The animation (below) shows water adhering to the faucet gaining mass until it is stretched to a point where the surface tension can no longer keep the drop linked to the faucet. It then separates and surface tension forms the drop into a sphere. If a stream of water were running from the faucet, the stream would break up into drops during its fall. Gravity stretches the stream, then surface tension pinches it into spheres.
- Flotation of objects denser than water occurs when the object is nonwettable and its weight is small enough to be borne by the forces arising from surface tension. For example, water striders use surface tension to walk on the surface of a pond in the following way. The nonwettability of the water strider's leg means there is no attraction between molecules of the leg and molecules of the water, so when the leg pushes down on the water, the surface tension of the water only tries to recover its flatness from its deformation due to the leg. This behavior of the water pushes the water strider upward so it can stand on the surface of the water as long as its mass is small enough that the water can support it. The surface of the water behaves like an elastic film: the insect's feet cause indentations in the water's surface, increasing its surface area and tendency of minimization of surface curvature (so area) of the water pushes the insect's feet upward.
- Separation of oil and water (in this case, water and liquid wax) is caused by a tension in the surface between dissimilar liquids. This type of surface tension is called "interface tension", but its chemistry is the same.
- Tears of wine is the formation of drops and rivulets on the side of a glass containing an alcoholic beverage. Its cause is a complex interaction between the differing surface tensions of water and ethanol; it is induced by a combination of surface tension modification of water by ethanol together with ethanol evaporating faster than water.
- A. Water beading on a leaf
- B. Water dripping from a tap
- C. Water striders stay at the top of liquid because of surface tension
- D. Lava lamp with interaction between dissimilar liquids: water and liquid wax
- E. Photo showing the "tears of wine" phenomenon.
Surfactants
Surface tension is visible in other common phenomena, especially when surfactants are used to decrease it:
- Soap bubbles have very large surface areas with very little mass. Bubbles in pure water are unstable. The addition of surfactants, however, can have a stabilizing effect on the bubbles (see Marangoni effect). Surfactants actually reduce the surface tension of water by a factor of three or more.
- Emulsions are a type of colloidal dispersion in which surface tension plays a role. Tiny droplets of oil dispersed in pure water will spontaneously coalesce and phase separate. The addition of surfactants reduces the interfacial tension and allow for the formation of oil droplets in the water medium (or vice versa). The stability of such formed oil droplets depends on many different chemical and environmental factors.
Surface curvature and pressure
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODJMelkyTDBOMWNuWmxaRk4xY21aaFkyVlVaVzV6YVc5dUxuQnVaeTh5TWpCd2VDMURkWEoyWldSVGRYSm1ZV05sVkdWdWMybHZiaTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
If no force acts normal to a tensioned surface, the surface must remain flat. But if the pressure on one side of the surface differs from pressure on the other side, the pressure difference times surface area results in a normal force. In order for the surface tension forces to cancel the force due to pressure, the surface must be curved. The diagram shows how surface curvature of a tiny patch of surface leads to a net component of surface tension forces acting normal to the center of the patch. When all the forces are balanced, the resulting equation is known as the Young–Laplace equation: where:
- Δp is the pressure difference, known as the Laplace pressure.
- γ is surface tension.
- Rx and Ry are radii of curvature in each of the axes that are parallel to the surface.
The quantity in parentheses on the right hand side is in fact (twice) the mean curvature of the surface (depending on normalisation). Solutions to this equation determine the shape of water drops, puddles, menisci, soap bubbles, and all other shapes determined by surface tension (such as the shape of the impressions that a water strider's feet make on the surface of a pond). The table below shows how the internal pressure of a water droplet increases with decreasing radius. For not very small drops the effect is subtle, but the pressure difference becomes enormous when the drop sizes approach the molecular size. (In the limit of a single molecule the concept becomes meaningless.)
Droplet radius | 1 mm | 0.1 mm | 1 μm | 10 nm |
---|---|---|---|---|
Δp (atm) | 0.0014 | 0.0144 | 1.436 | 143.6 |
Floating objects
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODJMelpoTDFOMWNtWmhZMlZmVkdWdWMybHZibDlFYVdGbmNtRnRMbk4yWnk4eU1qQndlQzFUZFhKbVlXTmxYMVJsYm5OcGIyNWZSR2xoWjNKaGJTNXpkbWN1Y0c1bi5wbmc=.png)
When an object is placed on a liquid, its weight Fw depresses the surface, and if surface tension and downward force become equal then it is balanced by the surface tension forces on either side Fs, which are each parallel to the water's surface at the points where it contacts the object. Notice that small movement in the body may cause the object to sink. As the angle of contact decreases, surface tension decreases. The horizontal components of the two Fs arrows point in opposite directions, so they cancel each other, but the vertical components point in the same direction and therefore add up to balance Fw. The object's surface must not be wettable for this to happen, and its weight must be low enough for the surface tension to support it. If m denotes the mass of the needle and g acceleration due to gravity, we have
Liquid surface
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODBMelJsTDFCdmRuSWxRelVsUVRGcGJuTnJZVjl1WVhCbGRHOXpkRjl0YVd4dWFXTmhMbXB3Wnk4eU1qQndlQzFRYjNaeUpVTTFKVUV4YVc1emEyRmZibUZ3WlhSdmMzUmZiV2xzYm1sallTNXFjR2M9LmpwZw==.jpg)
To find the shape of the minimal surface bounded by some arbitrary shaped frame using strictly mathematical means can be a daunting task. Yet by fashioning the frame out of wire and dipping it in soap-solution, a locally minimal surface will appear in the resulting soap-film within seconds.
The reason for this is that the pressure difference across a fluid interface is proportional to the mean curvature, as seen in the Young–Laplace equation. For an open soap film, the pressure difference is zero, hence the mean curvature is zero, and minimal surfaces have the property of zero mean curvature.
Contact angles
The surface of any liquid is an interface between that liquid and some other medium. The top surface of a pond, for example, is an interface between the pond water and the air. Surface tension, then, is not a property of the liquid alone, but a property of the liquid's interface with another medium. If a liquid is in a container, then besides the liquid/air interface at its top surface, there is also an interface between the liquid and the walls of the container. The surface tension between the liquid and air is usually different (greater) than its surface tension with the walls of a container. And where the two surfaces meet, their geometry must be such that all forces balance.
![]() |
Where the two surfaces meet, they form a contact angle, θ, which is the angle the tangent to the surface makes with the solid surface. Note that the angle is measured through the liquid, as shown in the diagrams above. The diagram to the right shows two examples. Tension forces are shown for the liquid–air interface, the liquid–solid interface, and the solid–air interface. The example on the left is where the difference between the liquid–solid and solid–air surface tension, γls − γsa, is less than the liquid–air surface tension, γla, but is nevertheless positive, that is
In the diagram, both the vertical and horizontal forces must cancel exactly at the contact point, known as equilibrium. The horizontal component of fla is canceled by the adhesive force, fA.
The more telling balance of forces, though, is in the vertical direction. The vertical component of fla must exactly cancel the difference of the forces along the solid surface, fls − fsa.
Liquid | Solid | Contact angle | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
water |
| 0° | |||
ethanol | |||||
diethyl ether | |||||
carbon tetrachloride | |||||
glycerol | |||||
acetic acid | |||||
water | paraffin wax | 107° | |||
silver | 90° | ||||
methyl iodide | soda-lime glass | 29° | |||
lead glass | 30° | ||||
fused quartz | 33° | ||||
mercury | soda-lime glass | 140° |
Since the forces are in direct proportion to their respective surface tensions, we also have:
where
- γls is the liquid–solid surface tension,
- γla is the liquid–air surface tension,
- γsa is the solid–air surface tension,
- θ is the contact angle, where a concave meniscus has contact angle less than 90° and a convex meniscus has contact angle of greater than 90°.
This means that although the difference between the liquid–solid and solid–air surface tension, γls − γsa, is difficult to measure directly, it can be inferred from the liquid–air surface tension, γla, and the equilibrium contact angle, θ, which is a function of the easily measurable advancing and receding contact angles (see main article contact angle).
This same relationship exists in the diagram on the right. But in this case we see that because the contact angle is less than 90°, the liquid–solid/solid–air surface tension difference must be negative:
Special contact angles
Observe that in the special case of a water–silver interface where the contact angle is equal to 90°, the liquid–solid/solid–air surface tension difference is exactly zero.
Another special case is where the contact angle is exactly 180°. Water with specially prepared Teflon approaches this. Contact angle of 180° occurs when the liquid–solid surface tension is exactly equal to the liquid–air surface tension.
Liquid in a vertical tube
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWpMMk5rTDBoblFtRnliMjFsZEdWeUxtZHBaaTh4TXpCd2VDMUlaMEpoY205dFpYUmxjaTVuYVdZPS5naWY=.gif)
An old style mercury barometer consists of a vertical glass tube about 1 cm in diameter partially filled with mercury, and with a vacuum (called Torricelli's vacuum) in the unfilled volume (see diagram to the right). Notice that the mercury level at the center of the tube is higher than at the edges, making the upper surface of the mercury dome-shaped. The center of mass of the entire column of mercury would be slightly lower if the top surface of the mercury were flat over the entire cross-section of the tube. But the dome-shaped top gives slightly less surface area to the entire mass of mercury. Again the two effects combine to minimize the total potential energy. Such a surface shape is known as a convex meniscus.
We consider the surface area of the entire mass of mercury, including the part of the surface that is in contact with the glass, because mercury does not adhere to glass at all. So the surface tension of the mercury acts over its entire surface area, including where it is in contact with the glass. If instead of glass, the tube was made out of copper, the situation would be very different. Mercury aggressively adheres to copper. So in a copper tube, the level of mercury at the center of the tube will be lower than at the edges (that is, it would be a concave meniscus). In a situation where the liquid adheres to the walls of its container, we consider the part of the fluid's surface area that is in contact with the container to have negative surface tension. The fluid then works to maximize the contact surface area. So in this case increasing the area in contact with the container decreases rather than increases the potential energy. That decrease is enough to compensate for the increased potential energy associated with lifting the fluid near the walls of the container.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODRMemcxTDBOaGNHbHNiR0Z5ZVVGamRHbHZiaTV6ZG1jdk1UTXdjSGd0UTJGd2FXeHNZWEo1UVdOMGFXOXVMbk4yWnk1d2JtYz0ucG5n.png)
If a tube is sufficiently narrow and the liquid adhesion to its walls is sufficiently strong, surface tension can draw liquid up the tube in a phenomenon known as capillary action. The height to which the column is lifted is given by Jurin's law:
where
- h is the height the liquid is lifted,
- γla is the liquid–air surface tension,
- ρ is the density of the liquid,
- r is the radius of the capillary,
- g is the acceleration due to gravity,
- θ is the angle of contact described above. If θ is greater than 90°, as with mercury in a glass container, the liquid will be depressed rather than lifted.
Puddles on a surface
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWxMMlUwTDFOMWNtWlVaVzV6YVc5dVJXUm5aVTltVUc5dmJDNXdibWN2TWpJd2NIZ3RVM1Z5WmxSbGJuTnBiMjVGWkdkbFQyWlFiMjlzTG5CdVp3PT0ucG5n.png)
Pouring mercury onto a horizontal flat sheet of glass results in a puddle that has a perceptible thickness. The puddle will spread out only to the point where it is a little under half a centimetre thick, and no thinner. Again this is due to the action of mercury's strong surface tension. The liquid mass flattens out because that brings as much of the mercury to as low a level as possible, but the surface tension, at the same time, is acting to reduce the total surface area. The result of the compromise is a puddle of a nearly fixed thickness.
The same surface tension demonstration can be done with water, lime water or even saline, but only on a surface made of a substance to which water does not adhere. Wax is such a substance. Water poured onto a smooth, flat, horizontal wax surface, say a waxed sheet of glass, will behave similarly to the mercury poured onto glass.
The thickness of a puddle of liquid on a surface whose contact angle is 180° is given by:
where
- h is the depth of the puddle in centimeters or meters.
- γ is the surface tension of the liquid in dynes per centimeter or newtons per meter.
- g is the acceleration due to gravity and is equal to 980 cm/s2 or 9.8 m/s2
- ρ is the density of the liquid in grams per cubic centimeter or kilograms per cubic meter
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOHdMekF3TDFOMWNtWmhZMlZmZEdWdWMybHZiaTV6ZG1jdk1qSXdjSGd0VTNWeVptRmpaVjkwWlc1emFXOXVMbk4yWnk1d2JtYz0ucG5n.png)
In reality, the thicknesses of the puddles will be slightly less than what is predicted by the above formula because very few surfaces have a contact angle of 180° with any liquid. When the contact angle is less than 180°, the thickness is given by:
For mercury on glass, γHg = 487 dyn/cm, ρHg = 13.5 g/cm3 and θ = 140°, which gives hHg = 0.36 cm. For water on paraffin at 25 °C, γ = 72 dyn/cm, ρ = 1.0 g/cm3, and θ = 107° which gives hH2O = 0.44 cm.
The formula also predicts that when the contact angle is 0°, the liquid will spread out into a micro-thin layer over the surface. Such a surface is said to be fully wettable by the liquid.
Breakup of streams into drops
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWxMMlUxTDBSeWFYQndhVzVuWDJaaGRXTmxkRjh5TG1wd1p5OHhOekJ3ZUMxRWNtbHdjR2x1WjE5bVlYVmpaWFJmTWk1cWNHYz0uanBn.jpg)
In day-to-day life all of us observe that a stream of water emerging from a faucet will break up into droplets, no matter how smoothly the stream is emitted from the faucet. This is due to a phenomenon called the Plateau–Rayleigh instability, which is entirely a consequence of the effects of surface tension.
The explanation of this instability begins with the existence of tiny perturbations in the stream. These are always present, no matter how smooth the stream is. If the perturbations are resolved into sinusoidal components, we find that some components grow with time while others decay with time. Among those that grow with time, some grow at faster rates than others. Whether a component decays or grows, and how fast it grows is entirely a function of its wave number (a measure of how many peaks and troughs per centimeter) and the radii of the original cylindrical stream.
Gallery
- Breakup of a moving sheet of water bouncing off of a spoon.
- Photo of flowing water adhering to a hand. Surface tension creates the sheet of water between the flow and the hand.
-
- Surface tension prevents a coin from sinking: the coin is indisputably denser than water, so it must be displacing a volume greater than its own for buoyancy to balance mass.
- An aluminium coin floats on the surface of the water at 10 °C. Any extra weight would drop the coin to the bottom.
- A daisy. The entirety of the flower lies below the level of the (undisturbed) free surface. The water rises smoothly around its edge. Surface tension prevents water from displacing the air between the petals and possibly submerging the flower.
- A metal paper clip floats on water. Several can usually be carefully added without overflow of water.
- A metal paperclip floating on water. A grille in front of the light has created the 'contour lines' which show the deformation in the water surface caused by the metal paper clip.
Thermodynamics
Thermodynamic theories of surface tension
J.W. Gibbs developed the thermodynamic theory of capillarity based on the idea of surfaces of discontinuity. Gibbs considered the case of a sharp mathematical surface being placed somewhere within the microscopically fuzzy physical interface that exists between two homogeneous substances. Realizing that the exact choice of the surface's location was somewhat arbitrary, he left it flexible. Since the interface exists in thermal and chemical equilibrium with the substances around it (having temperature T and chemical potentials μi), Gibbs considered the case where the surface may have excess energy, excess entropy, and excess particles, finding the natural free energy function in this case to be , a quantity later named as the grand potential and given the symbol
.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlpqTDBkcFltSnpYMDF2WkdWc0xuUnBaaTlzYjNOemJHVnpjeTF3WVdkbE1TMHlNakJ3ZUMxSGFXSmljMTlOYjJSbGJDNTBhV1l1Y0c1bi5wbmc=.png)
Considering a given subvolume containing a surface of discontinuity, the volume is divided by the mathematical surface into two parts A and B, with volumes
and
, with
exactly. Now, if the two parts A and B were homogeneous fluids (with pressures
,
) and remained perfectly homogeneous right up to the mathematical boundary, without any surface effects, the total grand potential of this volume would be simply
. The surface effects of interest are a modification to this, and they can be all collected into a surface free energy term
so the total grand potential of the volume becomes:
For sufficiently macroscopic and gently curved surfaces, the surface free energy must simply be proportional to the surface area: for surface tension
and surface area
.
As stated above, this implies the mechanical work needed to increase a surface area A is dW = γ dA, assuming the volumes on each side do not change. Thermodynamics requires that for systems held at constant chemical potential and temperature, all spontaneous changes of state are accompanied by a decrease in this free energy , that is, an increase in total entropy taking into account the possible movement of energy and particles from the surface into the surrounding fluids. From this it is easy to understand why decreasing the surface area of a mass of liquid is always spontaneous, provided it is not coupled to any other energy changes. It follows that in order to increase surface area, a certain amount of energy must be added.
Gibbs and other scientists have wrestled with the arbitrariness in the exact microscopic placement of the surface. For microscopic surfaces with very tight curvatures, it is not correct to assume the surface tension is independent of size, and topics like the Tolman length come into play. For a macroscopic-sized surface (and planar surfaces), the surface placement does not have a significant effect on γ; however, it does have a very strong effect on the values of the surface entropy, surface excess mass densities, and surface internal energy,: 237 which are the partial derivatives of the surface tension function .
Gibbs emphasized that for solids, the surface free energy may be completely different from surface stress (what he called surface tension):: 315 the surface free energy is the work required to form the surface, while surface stress is the work required to stretch the surface. In the case of a two-fluid interface, there is no distinction between forming and stretching because the fluids and the surface completely replenish their nature when the surface is stretched. For a solid, stretching the surface, even elastically, results in a fundamentally changed surface. Further, the surface stress on a solid is a directional quantity (a stress tensor) while surface energy is scalar.
Fifteen years after Gibbs, J.D. van der Waals developed the theory of capillarity effects based on the hypothesis of a continuous variation of density. He added to the energy density the term where c is the capillarity coefficient and ρ is the density. For the multiphase equilibria, the results of the van der Waals approach practically coincide with the Gibbs formulae, but for modelling of the dynamics of phase transitions the van der Waals approach is much more convenient. The van der Waals capillarity energy is now widely used in the phase field models of multiphase flows. Such terms are also discovered in the dynamics of non-equilibrium gases.
Thermodynamics of bubbles
The pressure inside an ideal spherical bubble can be derived from thermodynamic free energy considerations. The above free energy can be written as: where
is the pressure difference between the inside (A) and outside (B) of the bubble, and
is the bubble volume. In equilibrium, dΩ = 0, and so,
For a spherical bubble, the volume and surface area are given simply by and
Substituting these relations into the previous expression, we find which is equivalent to the Young–Laplace equation when Rx = Ry.
Influence of temperature
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Surface tension is dependent on temperature. For that reason, when a value is given for the surface tension of an interface, temperature must be explicitly stated. The general trend is that surface tension decreases with the increase of temperature, reaching a value of 0 at the critical temperature. For further details see Eötvös rule. There are only empirical equations to relate surface tension and temperature:
- Eötvös:
Here V is the molar volume of a substance, TC is the critical temperature and k is a constant valid for almost all substances. A typical value is k = 2.1×10−7 J K−1 mol−2⁄3. For water one can further use V = 18 ml/mol and TC = 647 K (374 °C). A variant on Eötvös is described by Ramay and Shields:
where the temperature offset of 6 K provides the formula with a better fit to reality at lower temperatures.
- Guggenheim–Katayama:
γ° is a constant for each liquid and n is an empirical factor, whose value is 11/9 for organic liquids. This equation was also proposed by van der Waals, who further proposed that γ° could be given by the expression
where K2 is a universal constant for all liquids, and PC is the critical pressure of the liquid (although later experiments found K2 to vary to some degree from one liquid to another).
Both Guggenheim–Katayama and Eötvös take into account the fact that surface tension reaches 0 at the critical temperature, whereas Ramay and Shields fails to match reality at this endpoint.
Influence of solute concentration
Solutes can have different effects on surface tension depending on the nature of the surface and the solute:
- Little or no effect, for example sugar at water|air, most organic compounds at oil/air
- Increase surface tension, most inorganic salts at water|air
- Non-monotonic change, most inorganic acids at water|air
- Decrease surface tension progressively, as with most amphiphiles, e.g., alcohols at water|air
- Decrease surface tension until certain critical concentration, and no effect afterwards: surfactants that form micelles
What complicates the effect is that a solute can exist in a different concentration at the surface of a solvent than in its bulk. This difference varies from one solute–solvent combination to another.
Gibbs isotherm states that:
- Γ is known as surface concentration, it represents excess of solute per unit area of the surface over what would be present if the bulk concentration prevailed all the way to the surface. It has units of mol/m2
- C is the concentration of the substance in the bulk solution.
- R is the gas constant and T the temperature
Certain assumptions are taken in its deduction, therefore Gibbs isotherm can only be applied to ideal (very dilute) solutions with two components.
Influence of particle size on vapor pressure
The Clausius–Clapeyron relation leads to another equation also attributed to Kelvin, as the Kelvin equation. It explains why, because of surface tension, the vapor pressure for small droplets of liquid in suspension is greater than standard vapor pressure of that same liquid when the interface is flat. That is to say that when a liquid is forming small droplets, the equilibrium concentration of its vapor in its surroundings is greater. This arises because the pressure inside the droplet is greater than outside.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWpMMk0yTDFScGJubEVjbTl3YkdWMFRXOXNaV04xYkdWekxuQnVaeTh5TWpCd2VDMVVhVzU1UkhKdmNHeGxkRTF2YkdWamRXeGxjeTV3Ym1jPS5wbmc=.png)
- Pv° is the standard vapor pressure for that liquid at that temperature and pressure.
- V is the molar volume.
- R is the gas constant
- rk is the Kelvin radius, the radius of the droplets.
The effect explains supersaturation of vapors. In the absence of nucleation sites, tiny droplets must form before they can evolve into larger droplets. This requires a vapor pressure many times the vapor pressure at the phase transition point.
This equation is also used in catalyst chemistry to assess mesoporosity for solids.
The effect can be viewed in terms of the average number of molecular neighbors of surface molecules (see diagram).
The table shows some calculated values of this effect for water at different drop sizes:
P/P0 for water drops of different radii at STP | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Droplet radius (nm) | 1000 | 100 | 10 | 1 |
P/P0 | 1.001 | 1.011 | 1.114 | 2.95 |
The effect becomes clear for very small drop sizes, as a drop of 1 nm radius has about 100 molecules inside, which is a quantity small enough to require a quantum mechanics analysis.
Methods of measurement
Because surface tension manifests itself in various effects, it offers a number of paths to its measurement. Which method is optimal depends upon the nature of the liquid being measured, the conditions under which its tension is to be measured, and the stability of its surface when it is deformed. An instrument that measures surface tension is called tensiometer.
- Du Noüy ring method: The traditional method used to measure surface or interfacial tension. Wetting properties of the surface or interface have little influence on this measuring technique. Maximum pull exerted on the ring by the surface is measured.
- Wilhelmy plate method: A universal method especially suited to check surface tension over long time intervals. A vertical plate of known perimeter is attached to a balance, and the force due to wetting is measured.
- Spinning drop method: This technique is ideal for measuring low interfacial tensions. The diameter of a drop within a heavy phase is measured while both are rotated.
- Pendant drop method: Surface and interfacial tension can be measured by this technique, even at elevated temperatures and pressures. Geometry of a drop is analyzed optically. For pendant drops the maximum diameter and the ratio between this parameter and the diameter at the distance of the maximum diameter from the drop apex has been used to evaluate the size and shape parameters in order to determine surface tension.
- Bubble pressure method (Jaeger's method): A measurement technique for determining surface tension at short surface ages. Maximum pressure of each bubble is measured.
- Drop volume method: A method for determining interfacial tension as a function of interface age. Liquid of one density is pumped into a second liquid of a different density and time between drops produced is measured.
- Capillary rise method: The end of a capillary is immersed into the solution. The height at which the solution reaches inside the capillary is related to the surface tension by the equation discussed above.
- Stalagmometric method: A method of weighting and reading a drop of liquid.
- Sessile drop method: A method for determining surface tension and density by placing a drop on a substrate and measuring the contact angle (see Sessile drop technique).
- Du Noüy–Padday method: A minimized version of Du Noüy method uses a small diameter metal needle instead of a ring, in combination with a high sensitivity microbalance to record maximum pull. The advantage of this method is that very small sample volumes (down to few tens of microliters) can be measured with very high precision, without the need to correct for buoyancy (for a needle or rather, rod, with proper geometry). Further, the measurement can be performed very quickly, minimally in about 20 seconds.
- Vibrational frequency of levitated drops: The natural frequency of vibrational oscillations of magnetically levitated drops has been used to measure the surface tension of superfluid 4He. This value is estimated to be 0.375 dyn/cm at T = 0 K.
- Resonant oscillations of spherical and hemispherical liquid drop: The technique is based on measuring the resonant frequency of spherical and hemispherical pendant droplets driven in oscillations by a modulated electric field. The surface tension and viscosity can be evaluated from the obtained resonant curves.
- Drop-bounce method: This method is based on aerodynamic levitation with a split-able nozzle design. After dropping a stably levitated droplet onto a platform, the sample deforms and bounces back, oscillating in mid-air as it tries to minimize its surface area. Through this oscillation behavior, the liquid's surface tension and viscosity can be measured.
Values
Data table
Liquid | Temperature (°C) | Surface tension, γ |
---|---|---|
Acetic acid | 20 | 27.60 |
Acetic acid (45.1%) + Water | 30 | 40.68 |
Acetic acid (10.0%) + Water | 30 | 54.56 |
Acetone | 20 | 23.70 |
Benzene | 20 | 28.88 |
Blood | 22 | 55.89 |
Butyl acetate | 20 | 25.09 |
Butyric acid | 20 | 26.51 |
Carbon tetrachloride | 25 | 26.43 |
Chloroform | 25 | 26.67 |
Diethyl ether | 20 | 17.00 |
Diethylene glycol | 20 | 30.09 |
Dimethyl sulfoxide | 20 | 43.54 |
Ethanol | 20 | 22.27 |
Ethanol (40%) + Water | 25 | 29.63 |
Ethanol (11.1%) + Water | 25 | 46.03 |
Ethylene glycol | 25 | 47.3 |
Glycerol | 20 | 63.00 |
Heptane | 20 | 20.14 |
n-Hexane | 20 | 18.40 |
Hydrochloric acid 17.7 M aqueous solution | 20 | 65.95 |
Isopropanol | 20 | 21.70 |
Liquid helium II | −273 | 0.37 |
Mercury | 20 | 486.5 |
Liquid nitrogen | −196 | 8.85 |
Nonane | 20 | 22.85 |
Liquid oxygen | −182 | 13.2 |
Mercury | 15 | 487.00 |
Methanol | 20 | 22.60 |
Methylene iodide | 20 | 67.00 |
Molten Silver chloride | 650 | 163 |
Molten Sodium chloride/Calcium chloride (47/53 mole %) | 650 | 139 |
n-Octane | 20 | 21.80 |
Propionic acid | 20 | 26.69 |
Propylene carbonate | 20 | 41.1 |
Sodium chloride 6.0 M aqueous solution | 20 | 82.55 |
Sodium chloride (molten) | 1073 | 115 |
Sucrose (55%) + water | 20 | 76.45 |
Water | 0 | 75.64 |
Water | 25 | 71.97 |
Water | 50 | 67.91 |
Water | 100 | 58.85 |
Toluene | 25 | 27.73 |
Surface tension of water
The surface tension of pure liquid water in contact with its vapor has been given by IAPWS as
where both T and the critical temperature TC = 647.096 K are expressed in kelvins. The region of validity the entire vapor–liquid saturation curve, from the triple point (0.01 °C) to the critical point. It also provides reasonable results when extrapolated to metastable (supercooled) conditions, down to at least −25 °C. This formulation was originally adopted by IAPWS in 1976 and was adjusted in 1994 to conform to the International Temperature Scale of 1990.
The uncertainty of this formulation is given over the full range of temperature by IAPWS. For temperatures below 100 °C, the uncertainty is ±0.5%.
Surface tension of seawater
Nayar et al. published reference data for the surface tension of seawater over the salinity range of 20 ≤ S ≤ 131 g/kg and a temperature range of 1 ≤ t ≤ 92 °C at atmospheric pressure. The range of temperature and salinity encompasses both the oceanographic range and the range of conditions encountered in thermal desalination technologies. The uncertainty of the measurements varied from 0.18 to 0.37 mN/m with the average uncertainty being 0.22 mN/m.
Nayar et al. correlated the data with the following equation where γsw is the surface tension of seawater in mN/m, γw is the surface tension of water in mN/m, S is the reference salinity in g/kg, and t is temperature in degrees Celsius. The average absolute percentage deviation between measurements and the correlation was 0.19% while the maximum deviation is 0.60%.
The International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam (IAPWS) has adopted this correlation as an international standard guideline.
See also
- Agnes Pockels—early surface sciences researcher
- Anti-fog
- Capillary wave—short waves on a water surface, governed by surface tension and inertia
- Cheerio effect—the tendency for small wettable floating objects to attract one another
- Cohesion
- Dimensionless numbers
- Bond number or Eötvös number
- Capillary number
- Marangoni number
- Weber number
- Dortmund Data Bank—contains experimental temperature-dependent surface tensions
- Electrodipping force
- Electrowetting
- Electrocapillarity
- Eötvös rule—a rule for predicting surface tension dependent on temperature
- Hydrostatic equilibrium—the effect of gravity pulling matter into a round shape
- Interface (chemistry)
- Meniscus—surface curvature formed by a liquid in a container
- Mercury beating heart—a consequence of inhomogeneous surface tension
- Microfluidics
- Sessile drop technique
- Sow-Hsin Chen
- Specific surface energy—same as surface tension in isotropic materials.
- Spinning drop method
- Stalagmometric method
- Surface pressure
- Surface science
- Surface tension biomimetics
- Surface tension values
- Surfactants—substances which reduce surface tension.
- Szyszkowski equation—calculating surface tension of aqueous solutions
- Tears of wine—the surface tension induced phenomenon seen on the sides of glasses containing alcoholic beverages.
- Tolman length—leading term in correcting the surface tension for curved surfaces.
- Wetting and dewetting
Explanatory notes
- In a mercury barometer, the upper liquid surface is an interface between the liquid and a vacuum containing some molecules of evaporated liquid.
References
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- Nayar, K. G; Panchanathan, D; McKinley, G. H; Lienhard, J. H (November 2014). "Surface tension of seawater" (PDF). J. Phys. Chem. Ref. Data. 43 (4): 43103. Bibcode:2014JPCRD..43d3103N. doi:10.1063/1.4899037. hdl:1721.1/96884. Archived from the original on 2022-09-22. Retrieved 2018-04-20.
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Further reading
- Berry, M V (1971-03-01). "The molecular mechanism of surface tension". Physics Education. 6 (2): 79–84. doi:10.1088/0031-9120/6/2/001. ISSN 0031-9120.
- Marchand, Antonin; Terzi, Mariana (March 1971). "Molten salts mixture surface tension". The Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics. 3 (2): 259–265. doi:10.1016/S0021-9614(71)80111-8.
- Marchand, Antonin; Weijs, Joost H.; Snoeijer, Jacco H.; Andreotti, Bruno (2011-09-26). "Why is surface tension a force parallel to the interface?". American Journal of Physics. 79 (10): 999–1008. doi:10.1119/1.3619866. ISSN 0002-9505. arXiv:abs/1211.S. Sternberg
External links
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- "Why is surface tension parallel to the interface?". Physics Stack Exchange. Retrieved 2021-03-19.3854
- On surface tension and interesting real-world cases
- Surface Tensions of Various Liquids
- Calculation of temperature-dependent surface tensions for some common components
- Surface tension calculator for aqueous solutions containing the ions H+, NH+
4, Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, SO2−
4, NO−
3, Cl−, CO2−
3, Br− and OH−. - T. Proctor Hall (1893) New methods of measuring surface tension in liquids, Philosophical Magazine (series 5, 36: 385–415), link from Biodiversity Heritage Library.
- The Bubble Wall[permanent dead link ] (Audio slideshow from the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory explaining cohesion, surface tension and hydrogen bonds)
- C. Pfister: Interface Free Energy. Scholarpedia 2010 (from first principles of statistical mechanics)
- Surface and Interfacial Tension
This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions June 2019 Surface tension is the tendency of liquid surfaces at rest to shrink into the minimum surface area possible Surface tension is what allows objects with a higher density than water such as razor blades and insects e g water striders to float on a water surface without becoming even partly submerged Rain water flux from a canopy Among the forces that govern drop formation surface tension by cohesion Van der Waals force Plateau Rayleigh instability source source source source source source Surface tension and hydrophobicity interact in this attempt to cut a water droplet source source source source source source source source Surface tension experimental demonstration with soap At liquid air interfaces surface tension results from the greater attraction of liquid molecules to each other due to cohesion than to the molecules in the air due to adhesion There are two primary mechanisms in play One is an inward force on the surface molecules causing the liquid to contract Second is a tangential force parallel to the surface of the liquid This tangential force is generally referred to as the surface tension The net effect is the liquid behaves as if its surface were covered with a stretched elastic membrane But this analogy must not be taken too far as the tension in an elastic membrane is dependent on the amount of deformation of the membrane while surface tension is an inherent property of the liquid air or liquid vapour interface Because of the relatively high attraction of water molecules to each other through a web of hydrogen bonds water has a higher surface tension 72 8 millinewtons mN per meter at 20 C than most other liquids Surface tension is an important factor in the phenomenon of capillarity Surface tension has the dimension of force per unit length or of energy per unit area The two are equivalent but when referring to energy per unit of area it is common to use the term surface energy which is a more general term in the sense that it applies also to solids In materials science surface tension is used for either surface stress or surface energy CausesDiagram of the cohesive forces on molecules of a liquid Due to the cohesive forces a molecule located away from the surface is pulled equally in every direction by neighboring liquid molecules resulting in a net force of zero The molecules at the surface do not have the same molecules on all sides of them and therefore are pulled inward This creates some internal pressure and forces liquid surfaces to contract to the minimum area There is also a tension parallel to the surface at the liquid air interface which will resist an external force due to the cohesive nature of water molecules The forces of attraction acting between molecules of the same type are called cohesive forces while those acting between molecules of different types are called adhesive forces The balance between the cohesion of the liquid and its adhesion to the material of the container determines the degree of wetting the contact angle and the shape of meniscus When cohesion dominates specifically adhesion energy is less than half of cohesion energy the wetting is low and the meniscus is convex at a vertical wall as for mercury in a glass container On the other hand when adhesion dominates when adhesion energy is more than half of cohesion energy the wetting is high and the similar meniscus is concave as in water in a glass Surface tension is responsible for the shape of liquid droplets Although easily deformed droplets of water tend to be pulled into a spherical shape by the imbalance in cohesive forces of the surface layer In the absence of other forces drops of virtually all liquids would be approximately spherical The spherical shape minimizes the necessary wall tension of the surface layer according to Laplace s law Water droplet lying on a damask Surface tension is high enough to prevent seeping through the textile Another way to view surface tension is in terms of energy A molecule in contact with a neighbor is in a lower state of energy than if it were alone The interior molecules have as many neighbors as they can possibly have but the boundary molecules are missing neighbors compared to interior molecules and therefore have higher energy For the liquid to minimize its energy state the number of higher energy boundary molecules must be minimized The minimized number of boundary molecules results in a minimal surface area As a result of surface area minimization a surface will assume a smooth shape PhysicsPhysical units Surface tension represented by the symbol g alternatively s or T is measured in force per unit length Its SI unit is newton per meter but the cgs unit of dyne per centimeter is also used For example g 1 dyncm 1 ergcm2 1 10 7m N10 4m2 0 001 Nm 0 001 Jm2 displaystyle gamma 1 mathrm frac dyn cm 1 mathrm frac erg cm 2 1 mathrm frac 10 7 m cdot N 10 4 m 2 0 001 mathrm frac N m 0 001 mathrm frac J m 2 Definition This diagram illustrates the force necessary to increase the surface area This force is proportional to the surface tension Surface tension can be defined in terms of force or energy In terms of force Surface tension g of a liquid is the force per unit length In the illustration on the right the rectangular frame composed of three unmovable sides black that form a U shape and a fourth movable side blue that can slide to the right Surface tension will pull the blue bar to the left the force F required to hold the movable side is proportional to the length L of the immobile side Thus the ratio F L depends only on the intrinsic properties of the liquid composition temperature etc not on its geometry For example if the frame had a more complicated shape the ratio F L with L the length of the movable side and F the force required to stop it from sliding is found to be the same for all shapes We therefore define the surface tension as g F2L displaystyle gamma frac F 2L The reason for the 1 2 is that the film has two sides two surfaces each of which contributes equally to the force so the force contributed by a single side is gL F 2 In terms of energy Surface tension g of a liquid is the ratio of the change in the energy of the liquid to the change in the surface area of the liquid that led to the change in energy This can be easily related to the previous definition in terms of force if F is the force required to stop the side from starting to slide then this is also the force that would keep the side in the state of sliding at a constant speed by Newton s Second Law But if the side is moving to the right in the direction the force is applied then the surface area of the stretched liquid is increasing while the applied force is doing work on the liquid This means that increasing the surface area increases the energy of the film The work done by the force F in moving the side by distance Dx is W FDx at the same time the total area of the film increases by DA 2LDx the factor of 2 is here because the liquid has two sides two surfaces Thus multiplying both the numerator and the denominator of g 1 2 F L by Dx we get g F2L FDx2LDx WDA displaystyle gamma frac F 2L frac F Delta x 2L Delta x frac W Delta A This work W is by the usual arguments interpreted as being stored as potential energy Consequently surface tension can be also measured in SI system as joules per square meter and in the cgs system as ergs per cm2 Since mechanical systems try to find a state of minimum potential energy a free droplet of liquid naturally assumes a spherical shape which has the minimum surface area for a given volume The equivalence of measurement of energy per unit area to force per unit length can be proven by dimensional analysis EffectsWater Several effects of surface tension can be seen with ordinary water Beading of rain water on a waxy surface such as a leaf Water adheres weakly to wax and strongly to itself so water clusters into drops Surface tension gives them their near spherical shape because a sphere has the smallest possible surface area to volume ratio Formation of drops occurs when a mass of liquid is stretched The animation below shows water adhering to the faucet gaining mass until it is stretched to a point where the surface tension can no longer keep the drop linked to the faucet It then separates and surface tension forms the drop into a sphere If a stream of water were running from the faucet the stream would break up into drops during its fall Gravity stretches the stream then surface tension pinches it into spheres Flotation of objects denser than water occurs when the object is nonwettable and its weight is small enough to be borne by the forces arising from surface tension For example water striders use surface tension to walk on the surface of a pond in the following way The nonwettability of the water strider s leg means there is no attraction between molecules of the leg and molecules of the water so when the leg pushes down on the water the surface tension of the water only tries to recover its flatness from its deformation due to the leg This behavior of the water pushes the water strider upward so it can stand on the surface of the water as long as its mass is small enough that the water can support it The surface of the water behaves like an elastic film the insect s feet cause indentations in the water s surface increasing its surface area and tendency of minimization of surface curvature so area of the water pushes the insect s feet upward Separation of oil and water in this case water and liquid wax is caused by a tension in the surface between dissimilar liquids This type of surface tension is called interface tension but its chemistry is the same Tears of wine is the formation of drops and rivulets on the side of a glass containing an alcoholic beverage Its cause is a complex interaction between the differing surface tensions of water and ethanol it is induced by a combination of surface tension modification of water by ethanol together with ethanol evaporating faster than water A Water beading on a leaf B Water dripping from a tap C Water striders stay at the top of liquid because of surface tension D Lava lamp with interaction between dissimilar liquids water and liquid wax E Photo showing the tears of wine phenomenon Surfactants Surface tension is visible in other common phenomena especially when surfactants are used to decrease it Soap bubbles have very large surface areas with very little mass Bubbles in pure water are unstable The addition of surfactants however can have a stabilizing effect on the bubbles see Marangoni effect Surfactants actually reduce the surface tension of water by a factor of three or more Emulsions are a type of colloidal dispersion in which surface tension plays a role Tiny droplets of oil dispersed in pure water will spontaneously coalesce and phase separate The addition of surfactants reduces the interfacial tension and allow for the formation of oil droplets in the water medium or vice versa The stability of such formed oil droplets depends on many different chemical and environmental factors Surface curvature and pressure Surface tension forces acting on a tiny differential patch of surface d8x and d8y indicate the amount of bend over the dimensions of the patch Balancing the tension forces with pressure leads to the Young Laplace equation If no force acts normal to a tensioned surface the surface must remain flat But if the pressure on one side of the surface differs from pressure on the other side the pressure difference times surface area results in a normal force In order for the surface tension forces to cancel the force due to pressure the surface must be curved The diagram shows how surface curvature of a tiny patch of surface leads to a net component of surface tension forces acting normal to the center of the patch When all the forces are balanced the resulting equation is known as the Young Laplace equation Dp g 1Rx 1Ry displaystyle Delta p gamma left frac 1 R x frac 1 R y right where Dp is the pressure difference known as the Laplace pressure g is surface tension Rx and Ry are radii of curvature in each of the axes that are parallel to the surface The quantity in parentheses on the right hand side is in fact twice the mean curvature of the surface depending on normalisation Solutions to this equation determine the shape of water drops puddles menisci soap bubbles and all other shapes determined by surface tension such as the shape of the impressions that a water strider s feet make on the surface of a pond The table below shows how the internal pressure of a water droplet increases with decreasing radius For not very small drops the effect is subtle but the pressure difference becomes enormous when the drop sizes approach the molecular size In the limit of a single molecule the concept becomes meaningless Dp for water drops of different radii at STP Droplet radius 1 mm 0 1 mm 1 mm 10 nmDp atm 0 0014 0 0144 1 436 143 6 Floating objects Cross section of a needle floating on the surface of water Fw is the weight and Fs are surface tension resultant forces When an object is placed on a liquid its weight Fw depresses the surface and if surface tension and downward force become equal then it is balanced by the surface tension forces on either side Fs which are each parallel to the water s surface at the points where it contacts the object Notice that small movement in the body may cause the object to sink As the angle of contact decreases surface tension decreases The horizontal components of the two Fs arrows point in opposite directions so they cancel each other but the vertical components point in the same direction and therefore add up to balance Fw The object s surface must not be wettable for this to happen and its weight must be low enough for the surface tension to support it If m denotes the mass of the needle and g acceleration due to gravity we have Fw 2Fssin 8 mg 2gLsin 8 displaystyle F mathrm w 2F mathrm s sin theta quad Leftrightarrow quad mg 2 gamma L sin theta Liquid surface Minimal surface To find the shape of the minimal surface bounded by some arbitrary shaped frame using strictly mathematical means can be a daunting task Yet by fashioning the frame out of wire and dipping it in soap solution a locally minimal surface will appear in the resulting soap film within seconds The reason for this is that the pressure difference across a fluid interface is proportional to the mean curvature as seen in the Young Laplace equation For an open soap film the pressure difference is zero hence the mean curvature is zero and minimal surfaces have the property of zero mean curvature Contact angles The surface of any liquid is an interface between that liquid and some other medium The top surface of a pond for example is an interface between the pond water and the air Surface tension then is not a property of the liquid alone but a property of the liquid s interface with another medium If a liquid is in a container then besides the liquid air interface at its top surface there is also an interface between the liquid and the walls of the container The surface tension between the liquid and air is usually different greater than its surface tension with the walls of a container And where the two surfaces meet their geometry must be such that all forces balance Forces at contact point shown for contact angle greater than 90 left and less than 90 right Where the two surfaces meet they form a contact angle 8 which is the angle the tangent to the surface makes with the solid surface Note that the angle is measured through the liquid as shown in the diagrams above The diagram to the right shows two examples Tension forces are shown for the liquid air interface the liquid solid interface and the solid air interface The example on the left is where the difference between the liquid solid and solid air surface tension gls gsa is less than the liquid air surface tension gla but is nevertheless positive that is gla gt gls gsa gt 0 displaystyle gamma mathrm la gt gamma mathrm ls gamma mathrm sa gt 0 In the diagram both the vertical and horizontal forces must cancel exactly at the contact point known as equilibrium The horizontal component of fla is canceled by the adhesive force fA fA flasin 8 displaystyle f mathrm A f mathrm la sin theta The more telling balance of forces though is in the vertical direction The vertical component of fla must exactly cancel the difference of the forces along the solid surface fls fsa fls fsa flacos 8 displaystyle f mathrm ls f mathrm sa f mathrm la cos theta Some liquid solid contact angles Liquid Solid Contact anglewater soda lime glasslead glassfused quartz 0 ethanoldiethyl ethercarbon tetrachlorideglycerolacetic acidwater paraffin wax 107 silver 90 methyl iodide soda lime glass 29 lead glass 30 fused quartz 33 mercury soda lime glass 140 Since the forces are in direct proportion to their respective surface tensions we also have gls gsa glacos 8 displaystyle gamma mathrm ls gamma mathrm sa gamma mathrm la cos theta where gls is the liquid solid surface tension gla is the liquid air surface tension gsa is the solid air surface tension 8 is the contact angle where a concave meniscus has contact angle less than 90 and a convex meniscus has contact angle of greater than 90 This means that although the difference between the liquid solid and solid air surface tension gls gsa is difficult to measure directly it can be inferred from the liquid air surface tension gla and the equilibrium contact angle 8 which is a function of the easily measurable advancing and receding contact angles see main article contact angle This same relationship exists in the diagram on the right But in this case we see that because the contact angle is less than 90 the liquid solid solid air surface tension difference must be negative gla gt 0 gt gls gsa displaystyle gamma mathrm la gt 0 gt gamma mathrm ls gamma mathrm sa Special contact angles Observe that in the special case of a water silver interface where the contact angle is equal to 90 the liquid solid solid air surface tension difference is exactly zero Another special case is where the contact angle is exactly 180 Water with specially prepared Teflon approaches this Contact angle of 180 occurs when the liquid solid surface tension is exactly equal to the liquid air surface tension gla gls gsa gt 08 180 displaystyle gamma mathrm la gamma mathrm ls gamma mathrm sa gt 0 qquad theta 180 circ Liquid in a vertical tube Diagram of a mercury barometer An old style mercury barometer consists of a vertical glass tube about 1 cm in diameter partially filled with mercury and with a vacuum called Torricelli s vacuum in the unfilled volume see diagram to the right Notice that the mercury level at the center of the tube is higher than at the edges making the upper surface of the mercury dome shaped The center of mass of the entire column of mercury would be slightly lower if the top surface of the mercury were flat over the entire cross section of the tube But the dome shaped top gives slightly less surface area to the entire mass of mercury Again the two effects combine to minimize the total potential energy Such a surface shape is known as a convex meniscus We consider the surface area of the entire mass of mercury including the part of the surface that is in contact with the glass because mercury does not adhere to glass at all So the surface tension of the mercury acts over its entire surface area including where it is in contact with the glass If instead of glass the tube was made out of copper the situation would be very different Mercury aggressively adheres to copper So in a copper tube the level of mercury at the center of the tube will be lower than at the edges that is it would be a concave meniscus In a situation where the liquid adheres to the walls of its container we consider the part of the fluid s surface area that is in contact with the container to have negative surface tension The fluid then works to maximize the contact surface area So in this case increasing the area in contact with the container decreases rather than increases the potential energy That decrease is enough to compensate for the increased potential energy associated with lifting the fluid near the walls of the container Illustration of capillary rise and fall Red contact angle less than 90 blue contact angle greater than 90 If a tube is sufficiently narrow and the liquid adhesion to its walls is sufficiently strong surface tension can draw liquid up the tube in a phenomenon known as capillary action The height to which the column is lifted is given by Jurin s law h 2glacos 8rgr displaystyle h frac 2 gamma mathrm la cos theta rho gr where h is the height the liquid is lifted gla is the liquid air surface tension r is the density of the liquid r is the radius of the capillary g is the acceleration due to gravity 8 is the angle of contact described above If 8 is greater than 90 as with mercury in a glass container the liquid will be depressed rather than lifted Puddles on a surface Profile curve of the edge of a puddle where the contact angle is 180 The curve is given by the formula x x0 12Hcosh 1 Hh H1 h2H2 displaystyle x x 0 frac 1 2 H cosh 1 left frac H h right H sqrt 1 frac h 2 H 2 where H 2g gr textstyle H 2 sqrt gamma g rho Small puddles of water on a smooth clean surface have perceptible thickness Pouring mercury onto a horizontal flat sheet of glass results in a puddle that has a perceptible thickness The puddle will spread out only to the point where it is a little under half a centimetre thick and no thinner Again this is due to the action of mercury s strong surface tension The liquid mass flattens out because that brings as much of the mercury to as low a level as possible but the surface tension at the same time is acting to reduce the total surface area The result of the compromise is a puddle of a nearly fixed thickness The same surface tension demonstration can be done with water lime water or even saline but only on a surface made of a substance to which water does not adhere Wax is such a substance Water poured onto a smooth flat horizontal wax surface say a waxed sheet of glass will behave similarly to the mercury poured onto glass The thickness of a puddle of liquid on a surface whose contact angle is 180 is given by h 2ggr displaystyle h 2 sqrt frac gamma g rho where h is the depth of the puddle in centimeters or meters g is the surface tension of the liquid in dynes per centimeter or newtons per meter g is the acceleration due to gravity and is equal to 980 cm s2 or 9 8 m s2 r is the density of the liquid in grams per cubic centimeter or kilograms per cubic meterIllustration of how lower contact angle leads to reduction of puddle depth In reality the thicknesses of the puddles will be slightly less than what is predicted by the above formula because very few surfaces have a contact angle of 180 with any liquid When the contact angle is less than 180 the thickness is given by h 2gla 1 cos 8 gr displaystyle h sqrt frac 2 gamma mathrm la left 1 cos theta right g rho For mercury on glass gHg 487 dyn cm rHg 13 5 g cm3 and 8 140 which gives hHg 0 36 cm For water on paraffin at 25 C g 72 dyn cm r 1 0 g cm3 and 8 107 which gives hH2O 0 44 cm The formula also predicts that when the contact angle is 0 the liquid will spread out into a micro thin layer over the surface Such a surface is said to be fully wettable by the liquid Breakup of streams into drops Breakup of an elongated stream of water into droplets due to surface tension In day to day life all of us observe that a stream of water emerging from a faucet will break up into droplets no matter how smoothly the stream is emitted from the faucet This is due to a phenomenon called the Plateau Rayleigh instability which is entirely a consequence of the effects of surface tension The explanation of this instability begins with the existence of tiny perturbations in the stream These are always present no matter how smooth the stream is If the perturbations are resolved into sinusoidal components we find that some components grow with time while others decay with time Among those that grow with time some grow at faster rates than others Whether a component decays or grows and how fast it grows is entirely a function of its wave number a measure of how many peaks and troughs per centimeter and the radii of the original cylindrical stream Gallery Breakup of a moving sheet of water bouncing off of a spoon Photo of flowing water adhering to a hand Surface tension creates the sheet of water between the flow and the hand A soap bubble balances surface tension forces against internal pneumatic pressure Surface tension prevents a coin from sinking the coin is indisputably denser than water so it must be displacing a volume greater than its own for buoyancy to balance mass An aluminium coin floats on the surface of the water at 10 C Any extra weight would drop the coin to the bottom A daisy The entirety of the flower lies below the level of the undisturbed free surface The water rises smoothly around its edge Surface tension prevents water from displacing the air between the petals and possibly submerging the flower A metal paper clip floats on water Several can usually be carefully added without overflow of water A metal paperclip floating on water A grille in front of the light has created the contour lines which show the deformation in the water surface caused by the metal paper clip ThermodynamicsThermodynamic theories of surface tension J W Gibbs developed the thermodynamic theory of capillarity based on the idea of surfaces of discontinuity Gibbs considered the case of a sharp mathematical surface being placed somewhere within the microscopically fuzzy physical interface that exists between two homogeneous substances Realizing that the exact choice of the surface s location was somewhat arbitrary he left it flexible Since the interface exists in thermal and chemical equilibrium with the substances around it having temperature T and chemical potentials mi Gibbs considered the case where the surface may have excess energy excess entropy and excess particles finding the natural free energy function in this case to be U TS m1N1 m2N2 displaystyle U TS mu 1 N 1 mu 2 N 2 cdots a quantity later named as the grand potential and given the symbol W displaystyle Omega Gibbs placement of a precise mathematical surface in a fuzzy physical interface Considering a given subvolume V displaystyle V containing a surface of discontinuity the volume is divided by the mathematical surface into two parts A and B with volumes VA displaystyle V text A and VB displaystyle V text B with V VA VB displaystyle V V text A V text B exactly Now if the two parts A and B were homogeneous fluids with pressures pA displaystyle p text A pB displaystyle p text B and remained perfectly homogeneous right up to the mathematical boundary without any surface effects the total grand potential of this volume would be simply pAVA pBVB displaystyle p text A V text A p text B V text B The surface effects of interest are a modification to this and they can be all collected into a surface free energy term WS displaystyle Omega text S so the total grand potential of the volume becomes W pAVA pBVB WS displaystyle Omega p text A V text A p text B V text B Omega text S For sufficiently macroscopic and gently curved surfaces the surface free energy must simply be proportional to the surface area WS gA displaystyle Omega text S gamma A for surface tension g displaystyle gamma and surface area A displaystyle A As stated above this implies the mechanical work needed to increase a surface area A is dW g dA assuming the volumes on each side do not change Thermodynamics requires that for systems held at constant chemical potential and temperature all spontaneous changes of state are accompanied by a decrease in this free energy W displaystyle Omega that is an increase in total entropy taking into account the possible movement of energy and particles from the surface into the surrounding fluids From this it is easy to understand why decreasing the surface area of a mass of liquid is always spontaneous provided it is not coupled to any other energy changes It follows that in order to increase surface area a certain amount of energy must be added Gibbs and other scientists have wrestled with the arbitrariness in the exact microscopic placement of the surface For microscopic surfaces with very tight curvatures it is not correct to assume the surface tension is independent of size and topics like the Tolman length come into play For a macroscopic sized surface and planar surfaces the surface placement does not have a significant effect on g however it does have a very strong effect on the values of the surface entropy surface excess mass densities and surface internal energy 237 which are the partial derivatives of the surface tension function g T m1 m2 displaystyle gamma T mu 1 mu 2 cdots Gibbs emphasized that for solids the surface free energy may be completely different from surface stress what he called surface tension 315 the surface free energy is the work required to form the surface while surface stress is the work required to stretch the surface In the case of a two fluid interface there is no distinction between forming and stretching because the fluids and the surface completely replenish their nature when the surface is stretched For a solid stretching the surface even elastically results in a fundamentally changed surface Further the surface stress on a solid is a directional quantity a stress tensor while surface energy is scalar Fifteen years after Gibbs J D van der Waals developed the theory of capillarity effects based on the hypothesis of a continuous variation of density He added to the energy density the term c r 2 displaystyle c nabla rho 2 where c is the capillarity coefficient and r is the density For the multiphase equilibria the results of the van der Waals approach practically coincide with the Gibbs formulae but for modelling of the dynamics of phase transitions the van der Waals approach is much more convenient The van der Waals capillarity energy is now widely used in the phase field models of multiphase flows Such terms are also discovered in the dynamics of non equilibrium gases Thermodynamics of bubbles The pressure inside an ideal spherical bubble can be derived from thermodynamic free energy considerations The above free energy can be written as W DPVA pBV gA displaystyle Omega Delta PV text A p text B V gamma A where DP pA pB displaystyle Delta P p text A p text B is the pressure difference between the inside A and outside B of the bubble and VA displaystyle V text A is the bubble volume In equilibrium dW 0 and so DPdVA gdA displaystyle Delta P dV text A gamma dA For a spherical bubble the volume and surface area are given simply by VA 43pR3 dVA 4pR2dR displaystyle V text A tfrac 4 3 pi R 3 quad rightarrow quad dV text A 4 pi R 2 dR and A 4pR2 dA 8pRdR displaystyle A 4 pi R 2 quad rightarrow quad dA 8 pi R dR Substituting these relations into the previous expression we find DP 2Rg displaystyle Delta P frac 2 R gamma which is equivalent to the Young Laplace equation when Rx Ry Influence of temperature Temperature dependence of the surface tension between the liquid and vapor phases of pure waterTemperature dependency of the surface tension of benzene Surface tension is dependent on temperature For that reason when a value is given for the surface tension of an interface temperature must be explicitly stated The general trend is that surface tension decreases with the increase of temperature reaching a value of 0 at the critical temperature For further details see Eotvos rule There are only empirical equations to relate surface tension and temperature Eotvos gV2 3 k TC T displaystyle gamma V 2 3 k T mathrm C T Here V is the molar volume of a substance TC is the critical temperature and k is a constant valid for almost all substances A typical value is k 2 1 10 7 J K 1 mol 2 3 For water one can further use V 18 ml mol and TC 647 K 374 C A variant on Eotvos is described by Ramay and Shields gV2 3 k TC T 6K displaystyle gamma V 2 3 k left T mathrm C T 6 mathrm K right where the temperature offset of 6 K provides the formula with a better fit to reality at lower temperatures Guggenheim Katayama g g 1 TTC n displaystyle gamma gamma circ left 1 frac T T mathrm C right n g is a constant for each liquid and n is an empirical factor whose value is 11 9 for organic liquids This equation was also proposed by van der Waals who further proposed that g could be given by the expression K2TC1 3PC2 3 displaystyle K 2 T mathrm C 1 3 P mathrm C 2 3 where K2 is a universal constant for all liquids and PC is the critical pressure of the liquid although later experiments found K2 to vary to some degree from one liquid to another Both Guggenheim Katayama and Eotvos take into account the fact that surface tension reaches 0 at the critical temperature whereas Ramay and Shields fails to match reality at this endpoint Influence of solute concentration Solutes can have different effects on surface tension depending on the nature of the surface and the solute Little or no effect for example sugar at water air most organic compounds at oil air Increase surface tension most inorganic salts at water air Non monotonic change most inorganic acids at water air Decrease surface tension progressively as with most amphiphiles e g alcohols at water air Decrease surface tension until certain critical concentration and no effect afterwards surfactants that form micelles What complicates the effect is that a solute can exist in a different concentration at the surface of a solvent than in its bulk This difference varies from one solute solvent combination to another Gibbs isotherm states that G 1RT g ln C T P displaystyle Gamma frac 1 RT left frac partial gamma partial ln C right T P G is known as surface concentration it represents excess of solute per unit area of the surface over what would be present if the bulk concentration prevailed all the way to the surface It has units of mol m2 C is the concentration of the substance in the bulk solution R is the gas constant and T the temperature Certain assumptions are taken in its deduction therefore Gibbs isotherm can only be applied to ideal very dilute solutions with two components Influence of particle size on vapor pressure The Clausius Clapeyron relation leads to another equation also attributed to Kelvin as the Kelvin equation It explains why because of surface tension the vapor pressure for small droplets of liquid in suspension is greater than standard vapor pressure of that same liquid when the interface is flat That is to say that when a liquid is forming small droplets the equilibrium concentration of its vapor in its surroundings is greater This arises because the pressure inside the droplet is greater than outside Pvfog Pv eV2g RTrk displaystyle P mathrm v mathrm fog P mathrm v circ e V2 gamma RTr mathrm k Molecules on the surface of a tiny droplet left have on average fewer neighbors than those on a flat surface right Hence they are bound more weakly to the droplet than are flat surface molecules Pv is the standard vapor pressure for that liquid at that temperature and pressure V is the molar volume R is the gas constant rk is the Kelvin radius the radius of the droplets The effect explains supersaturation of vapors In the absence of nucleation sites tiny droplets must form before they can evolve into larger droplets This requires a vapor pressure many times the vapor pressure at the phase transition point This equation is also used in catalyst chemistry to assess mesoporosity for solids The effect can be viewed in terms of the average number of molecular neighbors of surface molecules see diagram The table shows some calculated values of this effect for water at different drop sizes P P0 for water drops of different radii at STPDroplet radius nm 1000 100 10 1 P P0 1 001 1 011 1 114 2 95 The effect becomes clear for very small drop sizes as a drop of 1 nm radius has about 100 molecules inside which is a quantity small enough to require a quantum mechanics analysis Methods of measurementBecause surface tension manifests itself in various effects it offers a number of paths to its measurement Which method is optimal depends upon the nature of the liquid being measured the conditions under which its tension is to be measured and the stability of its surface when it is deformed An instrument that measures surface tension is called tensiometer Du Nouy ring method The traditional method used to measure surface or interfacial tension Wetting properties of the surface or interface have little influence on this measuring technique Maximum pull exerted on the ring by the surface is measured Wilhelmy plate method A universal method especially suited to check surface tension over long time intervals A vertical plate of known perimeter is attached to a balance and the force due to wetting is measured Spinning drop method This technique is ideal for measuring low interfacial tensions The diameter of a drop within a heavy phase is measured while both are rotated Pendant drop method Surface and interfacial tension can be measured by this technique even at elevated temperatures and pressures Geometry of a drop is analyzed optically For pendant drops the maximum diameter and the ratio between this parameter and the diameter at the distance of the maximum diameter from the drop apex has been used to evaluate the size and shape parameters in order to determine surface tension Bubble pressure method Jaeger s method A measurement technique for determining surface tension at short surface ages Maximum pressure of each bubble is measured Drop volume method A method for determining interfacial tension as a function of interface age Liquid of one density is pumped into a second liquid of a different density and time between drops produced is measured Capillary rise method The end of a capillary is immersed into the solution The height at which the solution reaches inside the capillary is related to the surface tension by the equation discussed above Stalagmometric method A method of weighting and reading a drop of liquid Sessile drop method A method for determining surface tension and density by placing a drop on a substrate and measuring the contact angle see Sessile drop technique Du Nouy Padday method A minimized version of Du Nouy method uses a small diameter metal needle instead of a ring in combination with a high sensitivity microbalance to record maximum pull The advantage of this method is that very small sample volumes down to few tens of microliters can be measured with very high precision without the need to correct for buoyancy for a needle or rather rod with proper geometry Further the measurement can be performed very quickly minimally in about 20 seconds Vibrational frequency of levitated drops The natural frequency of vibrational oscillations of magnetically levitated drops has been used to measure the surface tension of superfluid 4He This value is estimated to be 0 375 dyn cm at T 0 K Resonant oscillations of spherical and hemispherical liquid drop The technique is based on measuring the resonant frequency of spherical and hemispherical pendant droplets driven in oscillations by a modulated electric field The surface tension and viscosity can be evaluated from the obtained resonant curves Drop bounce method This method is based on aerodynamic levitation with a split able nozzle design After dropping a stably levitated droplet onto a platform the sample deforms and bounces back oscillating in mid air as it tries to minimize its surface area Through this oscillation behavior the liquid s surface tension and viscosity can be measured ValuesData table Surface tension of various liquids in dyn cm against air Mixture compositions denoted are by mass dyn cm is equivalent to the SI units of mN m millinewton per meter Liquid Temperature C Surface tension gAcetic acid 20 27 60Acetic acid 45 1 Water 30 40 68Acetic acid 10 0 Water 30 54 56Acetone 20 23 70Benzene 20 28 88Blood 22 55 89Butyl acetate 20 25 09Butyric acid 20 26 51Carbon tetrachloride 25 26 43Chloroform 25 26 67Diethyl ether 20 17 00Diethylene glycol 20 30 09Dimethyl sulfoxide 20 43 54Ethanol 20 22 27Ethanol 40 Water 25 29 63Ethanol 11 1 Water 25 46 03Ethylene glycol 25 47 3Glycerol 20 63 00Heptane 20 20 14n Hexane 20 18 40Hydrochloric acid 17 7 M aqueous solution 20 65 95Isopropanol 20 21 70Liquid helium II 273 0 37Mercury 20 486 5Liquid nitrogen 196 8 85Nonane 20 22 85Liquid oxygen 182 13 2Mercury 15 487 00Methanol 20 22 60Methylene iodide 20 67 00Molten Silver chloride 650 163Molten Sodium chloride Calcium chloride 47 53 mole 650 139n Octane 20 21 80Propionic acid 20 26 69Propylene carbonate 20 41 1Sodium chloride 6 0 M aqueous solution 20 82 55Sodium chloride molten 1073 115Sucrose 55 water 20 76 45Water 0 75 64Water 25 71 97Water 50 67 91Water 100 58 85Toluene 25 27 73Surface tension of water The surface tension of pure liquid water in contact with its vapor has been given by IAPWS as gw 235 8 1 TTC 1 256 1 0 625 1 TTC mN m displaystyle gamma text w 235 8 left 1 frac T T text C right 1 256 left 1 0 625 left 1 frac T T text C right right text mN m where both T and the critical temperature TC 647 096 K are expressed in kelvins The region of validity the entire vapor liquid saturation curve from the triple point 0 01 C to the critical point It also provides reasonable results when extrapolated to metastable supercooled conditions down to at least 25 C This formulation was originally adopted by IAPWS in 1976 and was adjusted in 1994 to conform to the International Temperature Scale of 1990 The uncertainty of this formulation is given over the full range of temperature by IAPWS For temperatures below 100 C the uncertainty is 0 5 Surface tension of seawater Nayar et al published reference data for the surface tension of seawater over the salinity range of 20 S 131 g kg and a temperature range of 1 t 92 C at atmospheric pressure The range of temperature and salinity encompasses both the oceanographic range and the range of conditions encountered in thermal desalination technologies The uncertainty of the measurements varied from 0 18 to 0 37 mN m with the average uncertainty being 0 22 mN m Nayar et al correlated the data with the following equation gsw gw 1 3 766 10 4S 2 347 10 6St displaystyle gamma mathrm sw gamma mathrm w left 1 3 766 times 10 4 S 2 347 times 10 6 St right where gsw is the surface tension of seawater in mN m gw is the surface tension of water in mN m S is the reference salinity in g kg and t is temperature in degrees Celsius The average absolute percentage deviation between measurements and the correlation was 0 19 while the maximum deviation is 0 60 The International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam IAPWS has adopted this correlation as an international standard guideline See alsoAgnes Pockels early surface sciences researcher Anti fog Capillary wave short waves on a water surface governed by surface tension and inertia Cheerio effect the tendency for small wettable floating objects to attract one another Cohesion Dimensionless numbers Bond number or Eotvos number Capillary number Marangoni number Weber number Dortmund Data Bank contains experimental temperature dependent surface tensions Electrodipping force Electrowetting Electrocapillarity Eotvos rule a rule for predicting surface tension dependent on temperature Hydrostatic equilibrium the effect of gravity pulling matter into a round shape Interface chemistry Meniscus surface curvature formed by a liquid in a container Mercury beating heart a consequence of inhomogeneous surface tension Microfluidics Sessile drop technique Sow Hsin Chen Specific surface energy same as surface tension in isotropic materials Spinning drop method Stalagmometric method Surface pressure Surface science Surface tension biomimetics Surface tension values Surfactants substances which reduce surface tension Szyszkowski equation calculating surface tension of aqueous solutions Tears of wine the surface tension induced phenomenon seen on the sides of glasses containing alcoholic beverages Tolman length leading term in correcting the surface tension for curved surfaces Wetting and dewettingExplanatory notesIn a mercury barometer the upper liquid surface is an interface between the liquid and a vacuum containing some molecules of evaporated liquid References Surface Tension an overview ScienceDirect Topics www sciencedirect com Archived from the original on 2021 12 30 Retrieved 2021 12 30 Surface Tension Water Properties USGS Water Science School US Geological Survey July 2015 Archived from the original on October 7 2015 Retrieved November 6 2015 Berry M V 1971 The molecular mechanism of surface tension PDF Physics Education 6 2 79 84 Bibcode 1971PhyEd 6 79B doi 10 1088 0031 9120 6 2 001 S2CID 250797804 Archived PDF from the original on 31 December 2021 Retrieved 8 July 2020 Halliday David Resnick Robert Krane Kenneth S 2010 04 20 Physics Volume 2 John Wiley amp Sons p 342 ISBN 978 0 471 40194 0 Archived from the original on 2022 09 22 Retrieved 2021 03 19 White Harvey E 1948 Modern College Physics van Nostrand ISBN 978 0 442 29401 4 Bush John W M April 2004 MIT Lecture Notes on Surface Tension lecture 1 PDF Massachusetts Institute of Technology Archived PDF from the original on March 8 2022 Retrieved April 1 2007 Mechanical definition of surface tension MIT Archived from the original on April 12 2013 Retrieved Dec 16 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Scientific Papers of J Willard Gibbs vol 1 Woodbridge CT Ox Bow Press pp 55 354 ISBN 978 0918024770 Landau Lifshitz 1980 Course of Theoretical Physics Volume 5 Statistical Physics I 3 ed Pergamon pp 517 537 Rusanov A 2005 Surface thermodynamics revisited Surface Science Reports 58 5 8 111 239 Bibcode 2005SurSR 58 111R doi 10 1016 j surfrep 2005 08 002 ISSN 0167 5729 van der Waals J D 1979 1893 The thermodynamic theory of capillarity under the hypothesis of a continuous variation of density J Stat Phys 20 2 translated by Rowlinson J S 197 200 Bibcode 1979JSP 20 197R doi 10 1007 BF01011513 S2CID 122954999 Cahn J W Hilliard J E 1958 Free energy of a nonuniform system I Interfacial free energy J Chem Phys 28 2 258 266 Bibcode 1958JChPh 28 258C doi 10 1063 1 1744102 Langer J S Bar On M Miller H D 1975 New computational method in the theory of spinodal decomposition Phys Rev A 11 4 1417 1429 Bibcode 1975PhRvA 11 1417L doi 10 1103 PhysRevA 11 1417 Gorban A N Karlin I V 2016 Beyond Navier Stokes equations capillarity of ideal gas Contemporary Physics Review article 58 1 70 90 arXiv 1702 00831 Bibcode 2017ConPh 58 70G doi 10 1080 00107514 2016 1256123 S2CID 55317543 Surface Tension by the Ring Method Du Nouy Method PDF PHYWE Archived PDF from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 09 08 Adam Neil Kensington 1941 The Physics and Chemistry of Surfaces 3rd ed Oxford University Press Physical Properties Sources Index Eotvos Constant Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2008 11 16 Vargaftik N B Volkov B N Voljak L D 1983 International Tables of the Surface Tension of Water PDF Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data 12 3 817 Bibcode 1983JPCRD 12 817V doi 10 1063 1 555688 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 12 21 Retrieved 2017 07 13 Moore Walter J 1962 Physical Chemistry 3rd ed Prentice Hall Ertl G Knozinger H and Weitkamp J 1997 Handbook of heterogeneous catalysis Vol 2 p 430 Wiley VCH Weinheim ISBN 3 527 31241 2 Calvert James B Surface Tension physics lecture notes University of Denver Archived from the original on 2007 09 15 Retrieved 2007 09 08 Sessile Drop Method Dataphysics Archived from the original on August 8 2007 Retrieved 2007 09 08 Vicente C Yao W Maris H Seidel G 2002 Surface tension of liquid 4He as measured using the vibration modes of a levitated drop Physical Review B 66 21 214504 Bibcode 2002PhRvB 66u4504V doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 66 214504 Zografov Nikolay 2014 Droplet oscillations driven by an electric field Colloids and Surfaces A Physicochemical and Engineering Aspects 460 351 354 doi 10 1016 j colsurfa 2013 12 013 Tankovsky N 2013 Electrically Driven Resonant Oscillations of Pendant Hemispherical Liquid Droplet and Possibility to Evaluate the Surface Tension in Real Time Zeitschrift fur Physikalische Chemie 227 12 1759 1766 doi 10 1524 zpch 2013 0420 S2CID 101722165 Tankovsky Nikolay 2011 Oscillations of a Hanging Liquid Drop Driven by Interfacial Dielectric Force Zeitschrift fur Physikalische Chemie 225 4 405 411 doi 10 1524 zpch 2011 0074 S2CID 101625925 Sun Yifan Muta Hiroaki Ohishi Yuji June 2021 Novel Method for Surface Tension Measurement the Drop Bounce Method Microgravity Science and Technology 33 3 32 Bibcode 2021MicST 33 32S doi 10 1007 s12217 021 09883 7 Lange s Handbook of Chemistry 1967 10th ed pp 1661 1665 ISBN 0 07 016190 9 11th ed Adamson Arthur W Gast Alice P 1997 08 18 Physical Chemistry of Surfaces PDF 6th ed New York Wiley Interscience pp 36 38 ISBN 978 0 471 14873 9 Brouwer W Pathria R K 1967 On the Surface Tension of Liquid Helium II Physical Review 163 1 200 205 Bibcode 1967PhRv 163 200B doi 10 1103 PhysRev 163 200 Moser Z Gasior W Rzyman K 1982 Activities and Surface Tension of Liquid AgCl KCl Solutions Journal of the Electrochemical Society 129 3 502 506 doi 10 1149 1 2131529 Addison C Coldrey J 1960 Influence of Surface Reactions on the Interface Between Liquid Sodium and Molten Sodium Chloride Calcium Chloride Mixtures Transactions of the Faraday Society 56 840 845 doi 10 1039 tf9605600840 International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam June 2014 Revised Release on Surface Tension of Ordinary Water Substance Archived from the original on 2016 04 04 Retrieved 2016 02 20 Nayar K G Panchanathan D McKinley G H Lienhard J H November 2014 Surface tension of seawater PDF J Phys Chem Ref Data 43 4 43103 Bibcode 2014JPCRD 43d3103N doi 10 1063 1 4899037 hdl 1721 1 96884 Archived from the original on 2022 09 22 Retrieved 2018 04 20 Millero Frank J Feistel Rainer Wright Daniel G McDougall Trevor J January 2008 The composition of Standard Seawater and the definition of the Reference Composition Salinity Scale Deep Sea Research Part I 55 1 50 Bibcode 2008DSRI 55 50M doi 10 1016 j dsr 2007 10 001 Guideline on the Surface Tension of Seawater PDF Technical report International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam October 2019 IAPWS G14 19 Archived PDF from the original on 2020 03 26 Retrieved 2020 03 26 Further readingBerry M V 1971 03 01 The molecular mechanism of surface tension Physics Education 6 2 79 84 doi 10 1088 0031 9120 6 2 001 ISSN 0031 9120 Marchand Antonin Terzi Mariana March 1971 Molten salts mixture surface tension The Journal of Chemical Thermodynamics 3 2 259 265 doi 10 1016 S0021 9614 71 80111 8 Marchand Antonin Weijs Joost H Snoeijer Jacco H Andreotti Bruno 2011 09 26 Why is surface tension a force parallel to the interface American Journal of Physics 79 10 999 1008 doi 10 1119 1 3619866 ISSN 0002 9505 arXiv abs 1211 S SternbergExternal linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Surface tension Why is surface tension parallel to the interface Physics Stack Exchange Retrieved 2021 03 19 3854 On surface tension and interesting real world cases Surface Tensions of Various Liquids Calculation of temperature dependent surface tensions for some common components Surface tension calculator for aqueous solutions containing the ions H NH 4 Na K Mg2 Ca2 SO2 4 NO 3 Cl CO2 3 Br and OH T Proctor Hall 1893 New methods of measuring surface tension in liquids Philosophical Magazine series 5 36 385 415 link from Biodiversity Heritage Library The Bubble Wall permanent dead link Audio slideshow from the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory explaining cohesion surface tension and hydrogen bonds C Pfister Interface Free Energy Scholarpedia 2010 from first principles of statistical mechanics Surface and Interfacial Tension