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The Captive Bubble Method Explained DataPhysics Instruments Logo

The Captive Bubble Method Explained

Figure 1: The captive bubble method is a special method for measuring the contact angle. It involves placing a drop of liquid or a gas bubble on a solid surface in a surrounding liquid.

Figure 1: The captive bubble method is a special method for measuring the contact angle. It involves placing a drop of liquid or a gas bubble on a solid surface in a surrounding liquid.

The captive bubble method is used to determine specific contact angles. It enables the contact angle on a solid surface in a surrounding liquid to be examined and can be used for surfaces that are very easy to wet. A contact angle meter is required for practical implementation.

What is the captive bubble method and what is it used for?

The captive bubble method is a special method for measuring the contact angle. It is closely related to the sessile drop method. Using the sessile drop method, a drop of liquid rests on a solid surface in a gas phase (usually air). Using captive bubble method, on the other hand, the solid surface is surrounded by a liquid. A gas bubble or a drop of a second liquid is deposited on the solid surface.

A key advantage of the captive bubble method is that it allows investigation under liquid conditions. This makes it particularly suitable for biological surfaces, hydrophilic materials or coated substrates that would be unstable in the gas phase.

Another advantage is that samples that are very easily wettable can be tested. During a contact angle measurement using the sessile drop method, a drop of liquid would spread completely on such surfaces, making it impossible to determine the contact angle accurately. The captive bubble method provides more accurate results for these samples.

Fundamentals of the captive bubble method: contact angle measurement

In materials science, the determination of contact angles and the surface energy of solids plays a crucial role in understanding the interactions between solid surfaces and liquids.

The contact angle describes the angle formed by a drop of liquid on a solid surface and provides information about the wetting behavior of this liquid-solid combination. Measuring the contact angle of a liquid on a solid provides information about the wetting behavior of this combination. At a contact angle of 0°, the drop is completely spread out on the solid surface. At a contact angle of 180°, the drop lies on the surface in a spherical shape and only touches the solid at one point. In practice, the contact angle is usually between these two extreme values.

How is the captive bubble method implemented in practice?

A contact angle measuring device, such as those from the OCA series from DataPhysics Instruments, is used to perform the captive bubble method. A contact angle meter consists of a dosing unit, usually a syringe with a needle, which hangs above the sample platform, as well as a light source and a camera for image evaluation.

A transparent vessel filled with liquid is placed on the sample platform. The solid sample is positioned horizontally in the liquid so that it is completely surrounded by the liquid. A gas bubble is placed on the underside of the solid sample using a syringe and a curved, U-shaped needle. The interaction between the phases – solid, liquid and gas – causes a characteristic contact angle to form at the contact line. This describes the equilibrium state between the surface tensions of the phases involved. The contact angle is then recorded optically using a high-resolution camera and subsequently quantified using image analysis software.

Alternatively, instead of a gas bubble, a drop of liquid can be placed on the solid to investigate the interaction between liquids A and B and the solid.