To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was introduced for contact angle measurements under equilibrium conditions. It enables to determine even ultralow contact angles with high precision without prewetting the investigated surface because in this case, the capillary bridge of the test liquid is formed from a pendant drop and used as a probe. The contact angle is determined from the measured capillary force and liquid bridge geometry by using Delaunay’s analytical solution. The method was experimentally proved to be valid. As a demonstration, contact angles less than 1° were measured with the uncertainty down to 0.1° on lightly corroded glass surfaces. Moreover, a new observation was obta...
This paper proposes a new procedure to simultaneously measure the static contact angle and the surfa...
grantor: University of TorontoLow-rate dynamic contact angles of a large number of liquids...
Free liquid surfaces in equilibrium are described by the Laplace capillary equation with suitable bo...
To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was intr...
To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was intr...
To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was intr...
Wetting, the process of water interacting with a surface, is critical in our everyday lives and in m...
The difficulty of measuring very large contact angles (>150 degrees) has become more relevant wit...
In this paper, the dynamic advancing and receding contact angles of a series of aqueous solutions we...
DWC research has been focused on water as condensing fluid and several methods have been proposed fo...
This paper proposes a new procedure to simultaneously measure the static contact angle and the surfa...
The current broad interest in wetting characterization of solid surfaces is driven by recent advance...
Dropwise condensation (DWC) research has been focused on water as condensing fluid. However, other t...
We have studied the microscopic shape, contact angle and Laplace law behavior of the liquid–gas inte...
Free liquid surfaces in equilibrium are described by the Laplace capillary equation with suitable bo...
This paper proposes a new procedure to simultaneously measure the static contact angle and the surfa...
grantor: University of TorontoLow-rate dynamic contact angles of a large number of liquids...
Free liquid surfaces in equilibrium are described by the Laplace capillary equation with suitable bo...
To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was intr...
To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was intr...
To avoid the restrictions of the captive bubble and the Wilhelmy plate techniques, a method was intr...
Wetting, the process of water interacting with a surface, is critical in our everyday lives and in m...
The difficulty of measuring very large contact angles (>150 degrees) has become more relevant wit...
In this paper, the dynamic advancing and receding contact angles of a series of aqueous solutions we...
DWC research has been focused on water as condensing fluid and several methods have been proposed fo...
This paper proposes a new procedure to simultaneously measure the static contact angle and the surfa...
The current broad interest in wetting characterization of solid surfaces is driven by recent advance...
Dropwise condensation (DWC) research has been focused on water as condensing fluid. However, other t...
We have studied the microscopic shape, contact angle and Laplace law behavior of the liquid–gas inte...
Free liquid surfaces in equilibrium are described by the Laplace capillary equation with suitable bo...
This paper proposes a new procedure to simultaneously measure the static contact angle and the surfa...
grantor: University of TorontoLow-rate dynamic contact angles of a large number of liquids...
Free liquid surfaces in equilibrium are described by the Laplace capillary equation with suitable bo...