Dictionary Definition
capillarity n : a phenomenon associated with
surface tension and resulting in the elevation or depression of
liquids in capillaries [syn: capillary
action]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Quotations
- 1856 William Somerville Orr - Orr's Circle of the Sciences
- Hence the allowance to be made for diminution of the height of a mercurial column, owing to capillarity, is determined by two considerations — the diameter of the tube and versed sine of the corresponding meniscus.
See also
Extensive Definition
Capillary action, capillarity, capillary motion,
or wicking is the ability of a substance to draw another substance
into it. The standard reference is to a tube in plants but can be
seen readily with porous paper. It occurs when the adhesive intermolecular
forces between the liquid and a substance are stronger than
the cohesive
intermolecular forces inside the liquid. The effect causes a
concave meniscus to
form where the substance is touching a vertical surface. The same
effect is what causes porous materials such as sponges to
soak up liquids.
A common apparatus used to demonstrate
capillary action is the capillary tube. When the lower end of a
vertical
glass tube is placed in a
liquid such as water, a
concave meniscus forms.
Surface
tension pulls the liquid column up until there is a sufficient
mass of liquid for gravitational
forces to overcome the intermolecular forces. The weight of the
liquid column is
proportional to the square
of the tube's diameter,
but the contact length (around the edge) between
the liquid and the tube is proportional only to the diameter of the
tube, so a narrow tube will draw a liquid column higher than a wide
tube. For example, a glass
capillary tube 0.5 mm
in diameter will lift approximately a 2.8 mm column of water.
With some pairs of materials, such as mercury
and glass, the interatomic forces within the liquid exceed those
between the solid and the liquid, so a convex meniscus forms and
capillary action works in reverse.
Examples
In hydrology, capillary action
describes the attraction of water molecules to soil particles. Capillary action is
responsible for moving groundwater from wet areas
of the soil to dry areas. Differences in soil matric potential
(\Psi_m) drive capillary action in soil.
Capillary action is also essential for the
drainage of constantly produced tear fluid from the eye, two canalicula of tiny diameter
are present in the inner corner of the eyelid, also called the
lacrymal ducts; their openings can be seen with the naked eye
within the lacrymal sacs when the eyelids are everted.
Paper towels
absorb liquid through capillary action, allowing a fluid to be
transferred from a surface to the towel. The small pores of a
sponge act
as small capillaries, causing it to absorb a comparatively large
amount of fluid.
Some old sport and exercise fabrics, such as Coolmax, use
capillary action to "wick" sweat away from the skin. These are
often referred to as
wicking fabrics, presumably after the capillary properties of a
candle
wick.
Chemists utilize capillary action in thin
layer chromatography, in which a solvent moves vertically up a
plate via capillary action. Dissolved solutes travel with the
solvent at various speeds depending on their polarity.
Formula
With notes on the dimension in SI units, the height h of a liquid column (m) is given by:-
- h=
where:
-
- \scriptstyle \gamma is the liquid-air surface tension (J/m² or N/m)
- θ is the contact angle
- ρ is the density of liquid (kg/m3)
- g is acceleration due to gravity (m/s²)
- r is radius of tube (m)
therefore, the height of the water column is
given by:
- h\approx .
Miscellaneous
Albert Einstein's first paper submitted to Annalen der Physik was on capillarity. It was titled Folgerungen aus den Capillaritätserscheinungen, which translates as Conclusions from the capillarity phenomena, found in volume 4, page 513. It was submitted in late 1900 and was published in 1901. In 1905 Einstein published four seminal papers in the same journal.See also
References
capillarity in Czech: Kapilára
capillarity in German: Kapillarität
capillarity in Spanish: Capilaridad
capillarity in French: Capillarité
capillarity in Italian: Capillarità
capillarity in Hebrew: נימיות
capillarity in Dutch: Capillariteit
capillarity in Japanese: 毛細管現象
capillarity in Norwegian: Kapillarkrefter
capillarity in Polish: Zjawiska kapilarne
capillarity in Portuguese: Capilaridade
capillarity in Russian: Капиллярность
capillarity in Slovak: Kapilarita
capillarity in Finnish: Kapillaari-ilmiö
capillarity in Swedish: Kapillärkraft
capillarity in Thai: แรงยกตัว
capillarity in Turkish: Kılcallık
capillarity in Chinese: 毛细现象