| New Reply |
water not flow out of capillary |
Share Thread |
| Dec1-12, 08:11 AM | #1 |
|
|
water not flow out of capillary
Why does water, in a small glass tube,open at both sides(for example) not flow out if we put it in vertical position and put our finger on the top?(we close it)?
|
| Dec1-12, 08:15 AM | #2 |
|
|
Surface tension. The force binding the surface molecules is greater than the weight of the thin coumn of liquid.
|
| Dec1-12, 09:30 AM | #3 |
|
|
Ok, but why does than have our finger on the top any influence on that?
And why does water not flow out of the pipette, is there the same reason? |
| Dec1-12, 09:41 AM | #4 |
|
|
water not flow out of capillary
Are you thinking more of a drinking straw? The reason why water doesn't come out when you place your finger over the top of the filled straw is that the air pressure acting on the bottom surface of the water results in an equal (and opposite) force to the weight of the water.
Since you essentially have a vacuum over the top of the column (no air pressure, or very little, acting on the top of the column) the water column has no net forces acting on it. edit: friction plays a part, too, and is partly contributing to the water column staying still. |
| Dec1-12, 09:49 AM | #5 |
|
Recognitions:
|
If the capillary is a bit thicker and/or the walls are hydrophobic instead, then surface tension won't actually hold the fluid to the capillary. But it will prevent fluid from breaking up into droplets or allowing bubbles to form. That means, entire column of liquid must move as one. That means, additional air can't get in between the closed end and the liquid. Pressure at the top drops, and atmospheric pressure from bellow holds the liquid in. If you remove your finger, pressure equalizes, and liquid is released. And yes, pipette works the same way. It relies on ambient pressure forcing or holding liquid in the pipette. (Some of this is redundant to what DocZaius has said, but it's important to point out that surface tension plays a role either way.) |
| New Reply |
Similar discussions for: water not flow out of capillary
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | Replies | ||
| Using capillary action to raise water (Is perpetual flow possible?) | General Physics | 22 | ||
| Difference between Capillary Rise and Capillary Depression | Chemistry | 3 | ||
| Pressure diffence between water column in capillary tube and open vessel | Introductory Physics Homework | 1 | ||
| Water in capillary tube.. | Introductory Physics Homework | 1 | ||
| gas flow through a capillary | Classical Physics | 1 | ||