Meniscus attached to an inclined plate

1,117

Solution 1

To answer the question in your comment:

Yes the contact angle remains constant. The contact angle is determined by surface energies of the three materials and microscopic surface roughness, neither of which depend on the direction of gravity so tipping the plane will not effect that.

The height of the meniscus (distance from the asymptotically flat horizontal surface to the contact point) is given by: $$z=\sqrt{\frac{2\gamma}{\rho g}(1-\cos(\alpha))}$$

derived here

Where $\alpha$ is the angle of the water at the contact point relative to horizontal

The extended domain version that properly predicts both positive and negative heights is:

$$z=2\sqrt{\frac{\gamma}{\rho g}}\sin\left(\frac{\alpha}2\right)$$

For a contact angle $\theta$ and a plane tipping angle $\phi$ off vertical the heights of the two contact points would be:

$$z_1=2\sqrt{\frac{\gamma}{\rho g}}\sin\left(\frac{\pi-2\,\theta+2\,\phi}4\right)$$ $$z_2=2\sqrt{\frac{\gamma}{\rho g}}\sin\left(\frac{\pi-2\,\theta-2\,\phi}4\right)$$

Here's a plot from horizontal to horizontal with an assumed contact angle of 45 degrees.

Meniscus Height vs. tip angle

And here's a gif of the surface:

meniscus

However, this model assumes a singular contact angle whereas real materials have contact angle hysteresis. So if we assumed ideal contact angle hysteresis, then if we start from vertical and slowly tip we'd get something more akin to this:

Meniscus Height vs. tip angle with hysteresis

Where near the beginning there is an upper and lower bound where the height would be somewhere in-between them. This figure assumes that the rotation happens about the mean contact point. If the rotation origin were below the lower contact point then both sides would tend towards the higher limit while if the rotation origin were above both contact points then they would both tend towards the lower limits.

Solution 2

Section 2 of the paper below uses geometric & variational techniques to show that the Young-Dupre relation still holds for a meniscus formed by a solid of rotation that makes an arbitrary angle with the vertical:

http://www.unisanet.unisa.edu.au/staffpages/stanmiklavcic/cm_anziam2.pdf

I can't imagine that the result would be all that different if you restricted things to planar symmetry instead of the cylindrical symmetry instead. On a fundamental level, Young's relation is just a statement about the three surface tensions (solid-liquid, liquid-gas, and solid-gas), specifically that their components tangent to the surface are balanced.

Share:
1,117

Related videos on Youtube

xzczd
Author by

xzczd

Updated on August 01, 2022

Comments

  • xzczd
    xzczd over 1 year

    To be more specific, suppose a hydrophilic infinite plate is stuck into a semi-infinite region of water, above the water is a semi-infinite region of air, when the plate is stuck into the water vertically, the contact angle is $\alpha$, as shown in the figure below:

    enter image description here

    Needless to say, the menisci on both sides are symmetric, but what will happen when the plate is inclined for an angle $\beta$? Will the contact angle $\alpha$ remain unchanged? The meniscus on which side will be higher?

    • DanielSank
      DanielSank over 8 years
      What have you tried? Do you know how to calculate the shape or height of the meniscus in the symmetric case?
    • xzczd
      xzczd over 8 years
      @DanielSank Yeah, I know, the meniscus in the above figure isn't plotted in a casual way, it's the numeric solution of Young-Laplace equation. (Well, should I add the corresponding Mathematica code?) Actually the core part of my question is just will the contact angle $α$ remain unchanged? If the answer is yes, then the shape of the meniscus can be easily calculated, but I'm not sure if Young's relation holds in this case.
  • Kyle Kanos
    Kyle Kanos over 8 years
    This answer could be better if you explained why the angle would change, rather than simply stating the claim.
  • xzczd
    xzczd over 8 years
    Is the lines in the 2nd figure plotted based on some equations or it's just a qualitative description for the ideal contact angle hysteresis?
  • Rick
    Rick over 8 years
    @xzczd it's $z1(50deg,\phi)$ and $z1(40deg,0)$ in solid red, $z2(40deg,\phi)$ and $z2(50deg,0)$ in dotted blue
  • xzczd
    xzczd over 8 years
    No, you've covered all the aspects of my question :) BTW I think it'll be better if you add the explanation for the 2nd (Oh, now it's the 3rd) figure to the body of your answer.