Influence of solid surface, temperature and concentration on contact angle of water-FeC nanofluid

Author(s):  
Angel Huminic ◽  
Gabriela Huminic ◽  
Claudiu Fleaca ◽  
Florian Dumitrache ◽  
Ion Morjan
2015 ◽  
Vol 771 ◽  
pp. 183-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
Windy Hermawan Mitrakusuma ◽  
Deendarlianto ◽  
Samsul Kamal ◽  
Indarto ◽  
M. Nuryadi ◽  
...  

Spray cooling is a method to lower the solid surface temperature by splashing droplets. The evaporation of droplet will take the heat from solid surface. One of the factors that contributes to the evaporation rate and droplet spreads on the surface is the wettability of fluid on surface. Contact angle is a parameter in categorizing the wettability of fluid at a solid surface. Many methods have been developed to measure the contact angle on solid surface. This paper will explain how to measure the contact angle by analyzing the image taken when droplet fluid attached to a surface. The method use MATLAB codes as tools for processing image and compute the result. There are four steps in processing an image of droplet on a surface: convert image to binary image, detect the boundary of the surface, determine the correlation of x-y pixel, and take the tangent of a line at the outer point of contact between fluid and surface. Validation is taken by comparing the result with “standard image” with various resolutions. This method also explains droplet dynamics when impacting a hot surface.


2020 ◽  
Vol 146 ◽  
pp. 03004
Author(s):  
Douglas Ruth

The most influential parameter on the behavior of two-component flow in porous media is “wettability”. When wettability is being characterized, the most frequently used parameter is the “contact angle”. When a fluid-drop is placed on a solid surface, in the presence of a second, surrounding fluid, the fluid-fluid surface contacts the solid-surface at an angle that is typically measured through the fluid-drop. If this angle is less than 90°, the fluid in the drop is said to “wet” the surface. If this angle is greater than 90°, the surrounding fluid is said to “wet” the surface. This definition is universally accepted and appears to be scientifically justifiable, at least for a static situation where the solid surface is horizontal. Recently, this concept has been extended to characterize wettability in non-static situations using high-resolution, two-dimensional digital images of multi-component systems. Using simple thought experiments and published experimental results, many of them decades old, it will be demonstrated that contact angles are not primary parameters – their values depend on many other parameters. Using these arguments, it will be demonstrated that contact angles are not the cause of wettability behavior but the effect of wettability behavior and other parameters. The result of this is that the contact angle cannot be used as a primary indicator of wettability except in very restricted situations. Furthermore, it will be demonstrated that even for the simple case of a capillary interface in a vertical tube, attempting to use simply a two-dimensional image to determine the contact angle can result in a wide range of measured values. This observation is consistent with some published experimental results. It follows that contact angles measured in two-dimensions cannot be trusted to provide accurate values and these values should not be used to characterize the wettability of the system.


1990 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Katoh ◽  
H. Fujita ◽  
H. Sasaki

Macroscopic wetting behavior is investigated theoretically from a thermodynamic viewpoint. The axisymmetric liquid meniscus formed under a conical solid surface is chosen as the subject of the theoretical analysis. Using the meniscus configuration obtained by the Laplace equation, the total free energy of the system is calculated. In the case of the half vertical angle of the cone φ = 90 deg (horizontal plate), the system shows thermodynamic instability when the meniscus attaches to the solid surface at the contact angle. This result, unlike the conventional view, agrees well with the practical wetting behavior observed in this study. On the other hand, when 0 deg < φ < 90 deg, the system shows thermodynamic stability at the contact angle. However, when the solid cone is held at a position higher than the critical height from a stationary liquid surface, the system becomes unstable. It is possible to measure the contact angle easily using this unstable phenomenon.


2017 ◽  
Vol 405 ◽  
pp. 88-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Zdziennicka ◽  
Katarzyna Szymczyk ◽  
Joanna Krawczyk ◽  
Bronisław Jańczuk

2016 ◽  
Vol 93 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Jian Wang ◽  
Shuo Guo ◽  
Hsuan-Yi Chen ◽  
Penger Tong

Research ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong-Ming Liu ◽  
Zi-Qing Wu ◽  
Sheng Bao ◽  
Wei-Hong Guo ◽  
Da-Wei Li ◽  
...  

The contact angle, as a vital measured parameter of wettability of material surface, has long been in dispute whether it is affected by gravity. Herein, we measured the advancing and receding contact angles on extremely low contact angle hysteresis surfaces under different gravities (1-8G) and found that both of them decrease with the increase of the gravity. The underlying mechanism is revealed to be the contact angle hysteresis and the deformation of the liquid-vapor interface away from the solid surface caused by gradient distribution of the hydrostatic pressure. The real contact angle is not affected by gravity and cannot measured by an optical method. The measured apparent contact angles are angles of inclination of the liquid-vapor interface away from the solid surface. Furthermore, a new equation is proposed based on the balance of forces acting on the three-phase contact region, which quantitatively reveals the relation of the apparent contact angle with the interfacial tensions and gravity. This finding can provide new horizons for solving the debate on whether gravity affects the contact angle and may be useful for the accurate measurement of the contact angle and the development of a new contact angle measurement system.


2019 ◽  
Vol 798 ◽  
pp. 158-162
Author(s):  
Buppachat Toboonsung

Titanium dioxide nanoparticle thin films on the glass slide of 5x20 cm2 as substrate were prepared by sparking method. The sparking system was modified by using titanium wires as an anode of 9 pieces and a cathode of 9 pieces which set the gap between the electrodes of 1 mm and connected a high voltage power supply. The sparking method was controlled a surface temperature of substrate as 26, 100 and 150 OC and a sparking time of 1-5 h in air atmosphere. The as-deposited thin films were analyzed by a scanning electron microscope, measured the water contact angle of 180 days and studied the durability of thin films on glass substrate to the drop water. The result indicated that the optimum condition of the as-deposited thin films was shown at the sparking time of 4 h and surface temperature of 150 OC which shown the homogeneity surface, the hydrophilic properties. The water contact angle increased with increasing the sparking time whereas the increasing surface temperature was found the decreasing of water contact angle. The optimum durability of thin films was used a minimum of a standard deviation (S.D.) at 4.27 which calculated from the water contact angle data from 1-180 days.


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