Abstract

This chapter models the collapse phase transition using nucleation and growth theory, and simulates the behavior of a spherical bubble with surfactant at its interface. If interfacial shear viscosity varies according to free area theory within the film, and free area vanishes with vanishing surface tension—the model correctly predicts the experimental behavior. The main goal of the chapter is to understand how pulmonary surfactant is able to reach and sustain high surface pressures. Pulmonary surfactant adsorbs at the air-water interface in the lungs, reducing its surface tension, particularly during exhalation, when the decreasing surface area compresses the interfacial film. In vitro, however, a collapse phase transition, in which the 2D film transforms to 2D structures, limits access to low surface tensions. When compressed on the surface of a captive bubble, pulmonary surfactant films partially avoid collapse and reach low surface tensions if compressed faster than a threshold rate. At progressively lower surface tensions, rates of collapse initially increase but then pass through a maximum and slow down.

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