Colloid retention at the meniscus wall contact line in an open microchannel     
Yazarlar (8)
Yuniati Zevi
Bin Gao
Wei Zhang
Veronica L Morales
Dr. Öğr. Üyesi Mehmet Ekrem ÇAKMAK Yalova Üniversitesi, Türkiye
Evelyn A Medrano
Wenjing Sang
Tammo Steenhuis
Makale Türü Özgün Makale
Makale Alt Türü SSCI, AHCI, SCI, SCI-Exp dergilerinde yayınlanan tam makale
Dergi Adı Water Research
Dergi ISSN 0043-1354 Wos Dergi Scopus Dergi
Dergi Tarandığı Indeksler SCI
Makale Dili İngilizce
Basım Tarihi 01-2012
Cilt No 46
Sayı 2
Sayfalar 295 / 306
DOI Numarası 10.1016/j.watres.2011.09.046
Makale Linki http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0043135411005768
Özet
Colloid retention mechanisms in partially saturated porous media are currently being researched with an array of visualization techniques. These visualization techniques have refined our understanding of colloid movement and retention at the pore scale beyond what can be obtained from breakthrough experiments. One of the remaining questions is what mechanisms are responsible for colloid immobilization at the triple point where air, water, and soil grain meet. The objective of this study was to investigate how colloids are transported to the air-water-solid (AWS) contact line in an open triangular microchannel, and then retained as a function of meniscus contact angle with the wall and solution ionic strength. Colloid flow path, meniscus shape and meniscus-wall contact angle, and colloid retention at the AWS contact line were visualized and quantified with a confocal microscope. Experimental results demonstrated that colloid retention at the AWS contact line was significant when the meniscus-wall contact angle was less than 16°, but was minimal for the meniscus-wall contact angles exceeding 20°. Tracking of individual colloids and computational hydrodynamic simulation both revealed that for small contact angles (e.g., 12.5°), counter flow and flow vortices formed near the AWS contact line, but not for large contact angles (e.g., 28°). This counter flow helped deliver the colloids to the wall surface just below the contact line. In accordance with DLVO and hydrodynamic torque calculations, colloid movement may be stopped when the colloid reached the secondary minimum at the wall near the contact line. However, contradictory to the prediction of the torque analysis, colloid retention at the AWS contact line decreased with increasing ionic strength for contact angles of 10-20°, indicating that the air-water interface was involved through both counter flow and capillary force. We hypothesized that capillary force pushed the colloid through the primary energy barrier to the primary minimum to become immobilized, when small fluctuations in water level stretched the meniscus over the colloid. For large meniscus-wall contact angles counter flow was not observed, resulting in less colloid retention, because a smaller number of colloids were transported to the contact line.
Anahtar Kelimeler
Contact angle | Retention | Capillary forces | Air-water-solid interface | Contact line | Colloids | Microchannel
BM Sürdürülebilir Kalkınma Amaçları
Atıf Sayıları
WoS 38
Colloid retention at the meniscus wall contact line in an open microchannel

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