Abstract

The contact angle determination on swelling polymer particles by the Washburn equation using column wicking measurements may be problematic because swelling occurs during the wicking process. The objective of this research was to develop a new model to more accurately determine contact angles for polymer particles that undergo solvent swelling during the column wicking process. Two phenomena were observed related to the swelling effect during the wicking process: (1) a temperature rise was detected during the wicking process when the swelling polymer particles interacted with polar liquids, and (2) a smaller average capillary radius (r) was obtained when using methanol (polar liquid) compared to using hexane (non-polar liquid). The particle swelling will induce both particle geometry changes and energy loss which will influence the capillary rise rate. The model developed in this study considered the average pore radius change and the energy loss due to the polymer swelling effect. Contact angle comparisons were conducted on wood with formamide, ethylene glycol, and water as test liquids, determined by both the new model and the Washburn equation. It was shown that the contact angles determined by the new model were about 4-37° lower than those determined by the Washburn equation for water, formamide, and ethylene glycol. Todetermine whether the polymer particles are swelling, two low surface tension liquids, one polar (methanol) and the other non-polar (hexane), can be used to determine the average pore radius (r values) using the Washburn equation. If the same r values are obtained for the two liquids, no swelling occurs, and the Washburn equation can be used for the contact angle calculation. Otherwise, the model established in this study should be used for contact angle determination.

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