Artigo Revisado por pares

Practical observation of deviation from Lucas–Washburn scaling in porous media

2002; Elsevier BV; Volume: 206; Issue: 1-3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0927-7757(02)00066-3

ISSN

1873-4359

Autores

Joachim Schoelkopf, Patrick A.C. Gane, Cathy J. Ridgway, G. Peter Matthews,

Tópico(s)

Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization

Resumo

This work analyses the applicability of the Lucas–Washburn equation to experimental observations of imbibition into real network structures. The experimental pore structures used in this study are constructed from tablets of two finely ground calcium carbonates, with defined differences in particle size distribution. These are compressed under a range of different applied pressures to achieve a controlled series of porosities while maintaining the surface chemical, particulate and morphological pore characteristics constant. The porosities are determined by mercury intrusion porosimetry applying corrections for mercury compression and penetrometer expansion together with a correction for sample skeletal compression (Gane et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc., 35 (1996)). Imbibition studies are made by bringing each porous sample into contact with a supersource of liquid and the dynamic imbibition is recorded gravimetrically. Results follow a long timescale macroscopic absorption rate depending on the square root of time but show a failure to scale according to pore size in the Lucas–Washburn equation even though the constants of surface energy, contact angle and fluid viscosity have been maintained. Furthermore, values of average measured pore radius are shown to be finer than the Lucas–Washburn predicted equivalent hydraulic capillary radius. The predominance of a relevant pore size within a given pore size distribution forming a selective pathway filling based on inertial retardation of larger pores and short-term linear time wetting in finer pores is argued to account for the departure from simple pore size scaling.

Referência(s)