Title of article :
A review of factors that affect contact angle and implications for flotation practice
Author/Authors :
Chau، نويسنده , , T.T. and Bruckard، نويسنده , , W.J. and Koh، نويسنده , , P.T.L. and Nguyen، نويسنده , , A.V.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
Contact angle and the wetting behaviour of solid particles are influenced by many physical and chemical factors such as surface roughness and heterogeneity as well as particle shape and size. A significant amount of effort has been invested in order to probe the correlation between these factors and surface wettability. Some of the key investigations reported in the literature are reviewed here.
clear from the papers reviewed that, depending on many experimental conditions such as the size of the surface heterogeneities and asperities, surface cleanliness, and the resolution of measuring equipment and data interpretation, obtaining meaningful contact angle values is extremely difficult and such values are reliant on careful experimental control. Surface wetting behaviour depends on not only surface texture (roughness and particle shape), and surface chemistry (heterogeneity) but also on hydrodynamic conditions in the preparation route. The inability to distinguish the effects of each factor may be due to the interplay and/or overlap of two or more factors in each system. From this review, it was concluded that:•
e geometry (and surface roughness of different scales) can be used to tune the contact angle; with increasing surface roughness the apparent contact angle decreases for hydrophilic materials and increases for hydrophobic materials.
n-ideal surfaces, such as mineral surfaces in the flotation process, kinetics plays a more important role than thermodynamics in dictating wettability.
le size encountered in flotation (10–200 μm) showed no significant effect on contact angle but has a strong effect on flotation rate constant.
is a lack of a rigid quantitative correlation between factors affecting wetting, wetting behaviour and contact angle on minerals; and hence their implication for flotation process. Specifically, universal correlation of contact angle to flotation recovery is still difficult to predict from first principles. Other advanced techniques and measures complementary to contact angle will be essential to establish the link between research and practice in flotation.
Keywords :
froth flotation , Hydrophobicity , Contact angle , Wetting
Journal title :
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science
Journal title :
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science