Title of article :
Effects of Sample Size on Surface-Tension Measurements of Nickel in Reduced-Gravity Parabolic Flights
Author/Authors :
S.-F. Chen and R. A. Overfelt ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Surface tensions of molten metals have been reported in the literature by application
of many "standard" techniques: sessile-drop, maximum bubble pressure,
pendant-drop, and capillary-rise methods. Great experimental care must be
exercised to ensure the absence of contamination, and containerless techniques
based upon the classical theory of oscillations of a liquid drop are being
developed for high-precision measurements on reactive alloys. Droplet positioning
and heating can be efficiently accomplished by electromagnetic levitation,
although additional modes of oscillation can be excited and the fundamental
oscillation mode can be shifted to higher frequencies due to asymmetries in
droplet shape when experiments are performed in earth-based laboratories.
These additional factors associated with 1 g experiments significantly complicate
data analysis. An electromagnetic levitator has been developed at Auburn
University to test containerless processing methods for characterizing the
surface tension of high temperature, reactive melts. Recent oscillating drop
experiments with nickel samples utilizing electromagnetic levitation in the low-g
environment of NASAʹs KC-135 research aircraft have shown droplet oscillations
in the primary mode and at the fundamental frequency. A series of experiments
was performed with droplets covering a range of sizes (i.e., mass), and the
largest samples exhibited the largest deviations from Rayleighʹs simple theory.
The smallest samples exhibited oscillatory behavior consistent with Rayleighʹs
simple theory. An uncertainty analysis showed that the oscillating-drop technique
Keywords :
Surface Tension , oscillating drop , containerless , electromagneticlevitation , nickel , molten metals
Journal title :
International Journal of Thermophysics
Journal title :
International Journal of Thermophysics