1996
DOI: 10.1039/ft9969203879
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Measurement of rise and electrophoretic velocities of gas bubbles

Abstract: A novel apparatus, incorporating two laser Doppler anemometers (LDA), has been designed and built to measure the rise rates and electrophoretic mobilities of gas bubbles in aqueous solutions, which were rigorously cleaned of adventitious surface active material by swarms of electrolytically generated bubbles. Single gas bubbles were then generated electrolytically at a Pt microelectrode in a specially designed cell, enabling bubble diameters to be varied between experiments. With an estimated precision of 5.3 … Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, a potential and charge exist at the vapor-liquid interface, although the mechanism responsible for this charge remains somewhat obscure [14] and its measurement is fraught [15]. A similar situation exists for nanobubbles adhering to a particle surface.…”
Section: Electrostatic Interactionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Similarly, a potential and charge exist at the vapor-liquid interface, although the mechanism responsible for this charge remains somewhat obscure [14] and its measurement is fraught [15]. A similar situation exists for nanobubbles adhering to a particle surface.…”
Section: Electrostatic Interactionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…On the other hand, using the fully mobile or no tangential stress boundary condition, normally assumed to be valid at the air-water interface, will underestimate the magnitude of the dynamic force by over four orders of magnitude, and the predicted coalescence times will be too short because hydrodynamic effects under this boundary condition are much weaker (20). Although measurements of the terminal velocities of rising bubbles (21,22) show that the fully mobile boundary condition is applicable in ultraclean water, such degree of cleanliness is impractical to achieve in our experiments. Quantitative estimates suggest that a surface concentration of surface-active species that reduces the interfacial tension by ∼1 mN∕m would be sufficient to cause bubbles to exhibit the no-slip boundary condition (23).…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In aqueous systems, inevitable surface impurities tend to arrest interfacial mobility and the mobile interface is not commonly encountered for drops or bubbles in the µm size range 20 .…”
Section: Since For Approaching Drops H(t) Is Decreasing the Analyticmentioning
confidence: 99%