Back to chapter

13.14:

Contact Angle

JoVE Core
Fisica
È necessario avere un abbonamento a JoVE per visualizzare questo.  Accedi o inizia la tua prova gratuita.
JoVE Core Fisica
Contact Angle

Lingue

Condividere

Consider a test tube of water. The water surface is pulled near the tube's inner wall and forms a concave meniscus. However, in the case of mercury, a convex meniscus is formed.

At the point of contact, if tangent lines are drawn to the solid surface towards the liquid and to the liquid surface away from the solid, the angle between the tangents is the contact angle.

The contact angle is acute for liquids that rise along the solid surface and obtuse for liquids that are depressed. The contact angle measures how likely the liquid is to wet the solid surface.

Liquid surfaces bend near a solid due to different forces at the point of contact. The adhesive force between the solid and liquid molecules is perpendicular to the solid surface, while the cohesive force between the liquid molecules is within the liquid. In addition, the weight acts downward.

If the net force passes through the solid, a concave meniscus is formed. If it passes through the liquid, a convex meniscus is formed.

13.14:

Contact Angle

When a solid is dipped inside a liquid, the liquid surface becomes curved near the contact. For some solid–liquid interfaces, the liquid is pulled up along the solid, while for others, the liquid surface is convex or depressed near the solid surface. This phenomenon can be explained using the concept of cohesive and adhesive forces.

The adhesive force is the molecular force between molecules of different materials, that is, between the molecules of the solid and the liquid. The cohesive force is the molecular force between molecules of the same material—in this context, between the liquid molecules of the same species.

The contact angle is the angle between the tangent planes at the solid and the liquid surface. It is drawn such that the tangent to the solid is toward the liquid, and the tangent to the liquid is away from the solid. The contact angle is acute if the liquid rises along the solid's surface and obtuse if the liquid is depressed.

The contact angle depends on the net force on the small part of the liquid near the contact. The forces on it are the adhesive force of the solid, which is usually attractive, the cohesive force from the molecules near the surface, and its weight. The liquid rests in a way that it is perpendicular to the resultant force. Due to the material dependence of the adhesive and cohesive forces, the contact angle depends on the pair of surfaces considered. This phenomenon is similar to friction.

The contact angle measurement provides a practical way to evaluate the interfacial strengths and interactions between a solid and liquid, and it has numerous applications in various fields, such as surface science, material science, and engineering.

Suggested Reading

  1. Verma, H.C. (2008). Concepts of Physics. Volume 1, Bharati Bhawan Pub. & Dis.: section 14.13; pages 288–289.