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Capillary action

Capillary action (sometimes called capillarity, capillary motion, capillary rise, capillary effect, or wicking) is the process of a liquid flowing in a narrow space without the assistance of, or even in opposition to, any external forces like gravity. The effect can be seen in the drawing up of liquids between the hairs of a paint-brush, in a thin tube, in porous materials such as paper and plaster, in some non-porous materials such as sand and liquefied carbon fiber, or in a biological cell. It occurs because of intermolecular forces between the liquid and surrounding solid surfaces. If the diameter of the tube is sufficiently small, then the combination of surface tension (which is caused by cohesion within the liquid) and adhesive forces between the liquid and container wall act to propel the liquid.[citation needed]

Capillary water flow up a 225 mm high porous brick after it was placed in a shallow tray of water. The time elapsed after first contact with water is indicated. From the weight increase, the estimated porosity is 25%.
Capillary action of water (polar) compared to mercury (non-polar), in each case with respect to a polar surface such as glass (≡Si–OH)

Etymology

Capillary comes from the Latin word capillaris, meaning "of or resembling hair." The meaning stems from the tiny, hairlike diameter of a capillary. While capillary is usually used as a noun, the word also is used as an adjective, as in "capillary action," in which a liquid is moved along — even upward, against gravity — as the liquid is attracted to the internal surface of the capillaries.

History

The first recorded observation of capillary action was by Leonardo da Vinci.[1][2] A former student of Galileo, Niccolò Aggiunti, was said to have investigated capillary action.[3] In 1660, capillary action was still a novelty to the Irish chemist Robert Boyle, when he reported that "some inquisitive French Men" had observed that when a capillary tube was dipped into water, the water would ascend to "some height in the Pipe". Boyle then reported an experiment in which he dipped a capillary tube into red wine and then subjected the tube to a partial vacuum. He found that the vacuum had no observable influence on the height of the liquid in the capillary, so the behavior of liquids in capillary tubes was due to some phenomenon different from that which governed mercury barometers.[4]

Others soon followed Boyle's lead.[5] Some (e.g., Honoré Fabri,[6] Jacob Bernoulli[7]) thought that liquids rose in capillaries because air could not enter capillaries as easily as liquids, so the air pressure was lower inside capillaries. Others (e.g., Isaac Vossius,[8] Giovanni Alfonso Borelli,[9] Louis Carré,[10] Francis Hauksbee,[11] Josia Weitbrecht[12]) thought that the particles of liquid were attracted to each other and to the walls of the capillary.

Although experimental studies continued during the 18th century,[13] a successful quantitative treatment of capillary action[14] was not attained until 1805 by two investigators: Thomas Young of the United Kingdom[15] and Pierre-Simon Laplace of France.[16] They derived the Young–Laplace equation of capillary action. By 1830, the German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss had determined the boundary conditions governing capillary action (i.e., the conditions at the liquid-solid interface).[17] In 1871, the British physicist Sir William Thomson (later Lord Kelvin) determined the effect of the meniscus on a liquid's vapor pressure—a relation known as the Kelvin equation.[18] German physicist Franz Ernst Neumann (1798–1895) subsequently determined the interaction between two immiscible liquids.[19]

Albert Einstein's first paper, which was submitted to Annalen der Physik in 1900, was on capillarity.[20][21]

Phenomena and physics

 
Moderate rising damp on an internal wall
 
Capillary flow experiment to investigate capillary flows and phenomena aboard the International Space Station

Capillary penetration in porous media shares its dynamic mechanism with flow in hollow tubes, as both processes are resisted by viscous forces.[22] Consequently, a common apparatus used to demonstrate the phenomenon is the capillary tube. When the lower end of a glass tube is placed in a liquid, such as water, a concave meniscus forms. Adhesion occurs between the fluid and the solid inner wall pulling the liquid column along until there is a sufficient mass of liquid for gravitational forces to overcome these intermolecular forces. The contact length (around the edge) between the top of the liquid column and the tube is proportional to the radius of the tube, while the weight of the liquid column is proportional to the square of the tube's radius. So, a narrow tube will draw a liquid column along further than a wider tube will, given that the inner water molecules cohere sufficiently to the outer ones.

Examples

In the built environment, evaporation limited capillary penetration is responsible for the phenomenon of rising damp in concrete and masonry, while in industry and diagnostic medicine this phenomenon is increasingly being harnessed in the field of paper-based microfluidics.[22]

In physiology, capillary action is essential for the drainage of continuously produced tear fluid from the eye. Two canaliculi of tiny diameter are present in the inner corner of the eyelid, also called the lacrimal ducts; their openings can be seen with the naked eye within the lacrymal sacs when the eyelids are everted.

Wicking is the absorption of a liquid by a material in the manner of a candle wick. Paper towels absorb liquid through capillary action, allowing a fluid to be transferred from a surface to the towel. The small pores of a sponge act as small capillaries, causing it to absorb a large amount of fluid. Some textile fabrics are said to use capillary action to "wick" sweat away from the skin. These are often referred to as wicking fabrics, after the capillary properties of candle and lamp wicks.

Capillary action is observed in thin layer chromatography, in which a solvent moves vertically up a plate via capillary action. In this case the pores are gaps between very small particles.

Capillary action draws ink to the tips of fountain pen nibs from a reservoir or cartridge inside the pen.

With some pairs of materials, such as mercury and glass, the intermolecular forces within the liquid exceed those between the solid and the liquid, so a convex meniscus forms and capillary action works in reverse.

In hydrology, capillary action describes the attraction of water molecules to soil particles. Capillary action is responsible for moving groundwater from wet areas of the soil to dry areas. Differences in soil potential ( ) drive capillary action in soil.

A practical application of capillary action is the capillary action siphon. Instead of utilizing a hollow tube (as in most siphons), this device consists of a length of cord made of a fibrous material (cotton cord or string works well). After saturating the cord with water, one (weighted) end is placed in a reservoir full of water, and the other end placed in a receiving vessel. The reservoir must be higher than the receiving vessel.[citation needed] A related but simplified capillary siphon only consists of two hook-shaped stainless-steel rods, whose surface is hydrophilic, allowing water to wet the narrow grooves between them. [23] Due to capillary action and gravity, water will slowly transfer from the reservoir to the receiving vessel. This simple device can be used to water houseplants when nobody is home. This property is also made use of in the lubrication of steam locomotives: wicks of worsted wool are used to draw oil from reservoirs into delivery pipes leading to the bearings.[24]

In plants and animals

Capillary action is seen in many plants, and plays a part in transpiration. Water is brought high up in trees by branching; evaporation at the leaves creating depressurization; probably by osmotic pressure added at the roots; and possibly at other locations inside the plant, especially when gathering humidity with air roots.[25][26][27]

Capillary action for uptake of water has been described in some small animals, such as Ligia exotica[28] and Moloch horridus.[29]

Height of a meniscus

Capillary rise of liquid in a capillary

 
Water height in a capillary plotted against capillary diameter

The height h of a liquid column is given by Jurin's law[30]

 

where   is the liquid-air surface tension (force/unit length), θ is the contact angle, ρ is the density of liquid (mass/volume), g is the local acceleration due to gravity (length/square of time[31]), and r is the radius of tube.

As r is in the denominator, the thinner the space in which the liquid can travel, the further up it goes. Likewise, lighter liquid and lower gravity increase the height of the column.

For a water-filled glass tube in air at standard laboratory conditions, γ = 0.0728 N/m at 20 °C, ρ = 1000 kg/m3, and g = 9.81 m/s2. Because water spreads on clean glass, the effective equilibrium contact angle is approximately zero.[32] For these values, the height of the water column is

 

Thus for a 2 m (6.6 ft) radius glass tube in lab conditions given above, the water would rise an unnoticeable 0.007 mm (0.00028 in). However, for a 2 cm (0.79 in) radius tube, the water would rise 0.7 mm (0.028 in), and for a 0.2 mm (0.0079 in) radius tube, the water would rise 70 mm (2.8 in).

Capillary rise of liquid between two glass plates

The product of layer thickness (d) and elevation height (h) is constant (d·h = constant), the two quantities are inversely proportional. The surface of the liquid between the planes is hyperbola.

Liquid transport in porous media

 
Capillary flow in a brick, with a sorptivity of 5.0 mm·min−1/2 and a porosity of 0.25.

When a dry porous medium is brought into contact with a liquid, it will absorb the liquid at a rate which decreases over time. When considering evaporation, liquid penetration will reach a limit dependent on parameters of temperature, humidity and permeability. This process is known as evaporation limited capillary penetration [22] and is widely observed in common situations including fluid absorption into paper and rising damp in concrete or masonry walls. For a bar shaped section of material with cross-sectional area A that is wetted on one end, the cumulative volume V of absorbed liquid after a time t is

 

where S is the sorptivity of the medium, in units of m·s−1/2 or mm·min−1/2. This time dependence relation is similar to Washburn's equation for the wicking in capillaries and porous media.[33] The quantity

 

is called the cumulative liquid intake, with the dimension of length. The wetted length of the bar, that is the distance between the wetted end of the bar and the so-called wet front, is dependent on the fraction f of the volume occupied by voids. This number f is the porosity of the medium; the wetted length is then

 

Some authors use the quantity S/f as the sorptivity.[34] The above description is for the case where gravity and evaporation do not play a role.

Sorptivity is a relevant property of building materials, because it affects the amount of rising dampness. Some values for the sorptivity of building materials are in the table below.

Sorptivity of selected materials (source:[35])
Material Sorptivity
(mm·min−1/2)
Aerated concrete 0.50
Gypsum plaster 3.50
Clay brick 1.16
Mortar 0.70
Concrete brick 0.20

See also

  • Bond number – Dimensionless number in fluid dynamics
  • Bound water – Thin layer of water surrounding mineral surfaces.
  • Capillary fringe – Subsurface layer in which groundwater seeps up from a water table by capillary action
  • Capillary pressure – Pressure between two fluids from forces between the fluids and tube walls
  • Capillary wave – Wave on the surface of a fluid, dominated by surface tension
  • Capillary bridges – Minimised surface of liquid commecting two wetted objects
  • Damp proofing – Type of moisture control in building construction
  • Darcy's law – Equation describing the flow of a fluid through a porous medium
  • Frost flower – Thin layer of ice extruded from a plant
  • Frost heaving – Upwards swelling of soil during freezing
  • Hindu milk miracle – 1995 alleged miracle incidents
  • Krogh model
  • Porosimetry – Measurement and characterization of the porosity of a material
  • Needle ice – Ice column formed when liquid groundwater rises into freezing air
  • Surface tension – Tendency of a liquid surface to shrink to reduce surface area
  • Washburn's equation – Equation describing the penetration length of a liquid into a capillary tube with time
  • Young–Laplace equation – Describing pressure difference over an interface in fluid mechanics

References

  1. ^ See:
    • Manuscripts of Léonardo de Vinci (Paris), vol. N, folios 11, 67, and 74.
    • Guillaume Libri, Histoire des sciences mathématiques en Italie, depuis la Renaissance des lettres jusqu'a la fin du dix-septième siecle [History of the mathematical sciences in Italy, from the Renaissance until the end of the seventeenth century] (Paris, France: Jules Renouard et cie., 1840), vol. 3, page 54 2016-12-24 at the Wayback Machine. From page 54: "Enfin, deux observations capitales, celle de l'action capillaire (7) et celle de la diffraction (8), dont jusqu'à présent on avait méconnu le véritable auteur, sont dues également à ce brillant génie." (Finally, two major observations, that of capillary action (7) and that of diffraction (8), the true author of which until now had not been recognized, are also due to this brilliant genius.)
    • C. Wolf (1857) "Vom Einfluss der Temperatur auf die Erscheinungen in Haarröhrchen" (On the influence of temperature on phenomena in capillary tubes) Annalen der Physik und Chemie, 101 (177) : 550–576 ; see footnote on page 551 2014-06-29 at the Wayback Machine by editor Johann C. Poggendorff. From page 551: " ... nach Libri (Hist. des sciences math. en Italie, T. III, p. 54) in den zu Paris aufbewahrten Handschriften des grossen Künstlers Leonardo da Vinci (gestorben 1519) schon Beobachtungen dieser Art vorfinden; ... " ( ... according to Libri (History of the mathematical sciences in Italy, vol. 3, p. 54) observations of this kind [i.e., of capillary action] are already to be found in the manuscripts of the great artist Leonardo da Vinci (died 1519), which are preserved in Paris; ... )
  2. ^ More detailed histories of research on capillary action can be found in:
    • David Brewster, ed., Edinburgh Encyclopaedia (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Joseph and Edward Parker, 1832), volume 10, pp. 805–823 2016-12-24 at the Wayback Machine.
    • Maxwell, James Clerk; Strutt, John William (1911). "Capillary Action" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 256–275.
    • John Uri Lloyd (1902) "References to capillarity to the end of the year 1900," 2014-12-14 at the Wayback Machine Bulletin of the Lloyd Library and Museum of Botany, Pharmacy and Materia Medica, 1 (4) : 99–204.
  3. ^ In his book of 1759, Giovani Batista Clemente Nelli (1725–1793) stated (p. 87) that he had "un libro di problem vari geometrici ec. e di speculazioni, ed esperienze fisiche ec." (a book of various geometric problems and of speculation and physical experiments, etc.) by Aggiunti. On pages 91–92, he quotes from this book: Aggiunti attributed capillary action to "moto occulto" (hidden/secret motion). He proposed that mosquitoes, butterflies, and bees feed via capillary action, and that sap ascends in plants via capillary action. See: Giovambatista Clemente Nelli, Saggio di Storia Letteraria Fiorentina del Secolo XVII ... [Essay on Florence's literary history in the 17th century, ... ] (Lucca, (Italy): Vincenzo Giuntini, 1759), pp. 91–92. 2014-07-27 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Robert Boyle, New Experiments Physico-Mechanical touching the Spring of the Air, ... (Oxford, England: H. Hall, 1660), pp. 265–270. Available on-line at: Echo (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science; Berlin, Germany) 2014-03-05 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. ^ See, for example:
    • Robert Hooke (1661) An attempt for the explication of the Phenomena observable in an experiment published by the Right Hon. Robert Boyle, in the 35th experiment of his Epistolical Discourse touching the Air, in confirmation of a former conjecture made by R. Hooke. [pamphlet].
    • Hooke's An attempt for the explication ... was reprinted (with some changes) in: Robert Hooke, Micrographia ... (London, England: James Allestry, 1667), pp. 12–22, "Observ. IV. Of small Glass Canes." 2016-12-24 at the Wayback Machine
    • Geminiano Montanari, Pensieri fisico-matematici sopra alcune esperienze fatte in Bologna ... 2016-12-29 at the Wayback Machine [Physical-mathematical ideas about some experiments done in Bologna ... ] (Bologna, (Italy): 1667).
    • George Sinclair, Ars Nova et Magna Gravitatis et Levitatis 2017-11-03 at the Wayback Machine [New and great powers of weight and levity] (Rotterdam, Netherlands: Arnold Leers, Jr., 1669).
    • Johannes Christoph Sturm, Collegium Experimentale sive Curiosum [Catalog of experiments, or Curiosity] (Nüremberg (Norimbergæ), (Germany): Wolfgang Moritz Endter & the heirs of Johann Andreas Endter, 1676). See: "Tentamen VIII. Canaliculorum angustiorum recens-notata Phænomena, ... " 2014-06-29 at the Wayback Machine (Essay 8. Recently noted phenomena of narrow capillaries, ... ), pp. 44–48.
  6. ^ See:
    • Honorato Fabri, Dialogi physici ... ((Lyon (Lugdunum), France: 1665), pages 157 ff 2016-12-24 at the Wayback Machine "Dialogus Quartus. In quo, de libratis suspensisque liquoribus & Mercurio disputatur. (Dialogue four. In which the balance and suspension of liquids and mercury is discussed).
    • Honorato Fabri, Dialogi physici ... ((Lyon (Lugdunum), France: Antoine Molin, 1669), pages 267 ff 2017-04-07 at the Wayback Machine "Alithophilus, Dialogus quartus, in quo nonnulla discutiuntur à D. Montanario opposita circa elevationem Humoris in canaliculis, etc." (Alithophilus, Fourth dialogue, in which Dr. Montanari's opposition regarding the elevation of liquids in capillaries is utterly refuted).
  7. ^ Jacob Bernoulli, Dissertatio de Gravitate Ætheris 2017-04-07 at the Wayback Machine (Amsterdam, Netherlands: Hendrik Wetsten, 1683).
  8. ^ Isaac Vossius, De Nili et Aliorum Fluminum Origine [On the sources of the Nile and other rivers] (Hague (Hagæ Comitis), Netherlands: Adrian Vlacq, 1666), pages 3–7 2017-04-07 at the Wayback Machine (chapter 2).
  9. ^ Borelli, Giovanni Alfonso De motionibus naturalibus a gravitate pendentibus (Lyon, France: 1670), page 385, Cap. 8 Prop. CLXXXV (Chapter 8, Proposition 185.). Available on-line at: Echo (Max Planck Institute for the History of Science; Berlin, Germany) 2016-12-23 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ Carré (1705) "Experiences sur les tuyaux Capillaires" 2017-04-07 at the Wayback Machine (Experiments on capillary tubes), Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences, pp. 241–254.
  11. ^ See:
    • Francis Hauksbee (1708) "Several Experiments Touching the Seeming Spontaneous Ascent of Water," 2014-06-29 at the Wayback Machine Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 26 : 258–266.
    • Francis Hauksbee, Physico-mechanical Experiments on Various Subjects ... (London, England: (Self-published), 1709), pages 139–169.
    • Francis Hauksbee (1711) "An account of an experiment touching the direction of a drop of oil of oranges, between two glass planes, towards any side of them that is nearest press'd together," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 27 : 374–375.
    • Francis Hauksbee (1712) "An account of an experiment touching the ascent of water between two glass planes, in an hyperbolick figure," Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 27 : 539–540.
  12. ^ See:
    • Josia Weitbrecht (1736) "Tentamen theoriae qua ascensus aquae in tubis capillaribus explicatur" 2014-06-29 at the Wayback Machine (Theoretical essay in which the ascent of water in capillary tubes is explained), Commentarii academiae scientiarum imperialis Petropolitanae (Memoirs of the imperial academy of sciences in St. Petersburg), 8 : 261–309.
    • Josias Weitbrecht (1737) "Explicatio difficilium experimentorum circa ascensum aquae in tubis capillaribus" 2014-11-05 at the Wayback Machine (Explanation of difficult experiments concerning the ascent of water in capillary tubes), Commentarii academiae scientiarum imperialis Petropolitanae (Memoirs of the imperial academy of sciences in St. Petersburg), 9 : 275–309.
  13. ^ For example:
    • In 1740, Christlieb Ehregott Gellert (1713–1795) observed that like mercury, molten lead would not adhere to glass and therefore the level of molten lead was depressed in a capillary tube. See: C. E. Gellert (1740) "De phenomenis plumbi fusi in tubis capillaribus" (On phenomena of molten lead in capillary tubes) Commentarii academiae scientiarum imperialis Petropolitanae (Memoirs of the imperial academy of sciences in St. Petersburg), 12 : 243–251. Available on-line at: Archive.org 2016-03-17 at the Wayback Machine.
    • Gaspard Monge (1746–1818) investigated the force between panes of glass that were separated by a film of liquid. See: Gaspard Monge (1787) "Mémoire sur quelques effets d'attraction ou de répulsion apparente entre les molécules de matière" 2016-03-16 at the Wayback Machine (Memoir on some effects of the apparent attraction or repulsion between molecules of matter), Histoire de l'Académie royale des sciences, avec les Mémoires de l'Académie Royale des Sciences de Paris (History of the Royal Academy of Sciences, with the Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sciences of Paris), pp. 506–529. Monge proposed that particles of a liquid exert, on each other, a short-range force of attraction, and that this force produces the surface tension of the liquid. From p. 529: "En supposant ainsi que l'adhérence des molécules d'un liquide n'ait d'effet sensible qu'à la surface même, & dans le sens de la surface, il seroit facile de déterminer la courbure des surfaces des liquides dans le voisinage des parois qui les conteinnent ; ces surfaces seroient des lintéaires dont la tension, constante dans tous les sens, seroit par-tout égale à l'adhérence de deux molécules ; & les phénomènes des tubes capillaires n'auroient plus rein qui ne pût être déterminé par l'analyse." (Thus by assuming that the adhesion of a liquid's molecules has a significant effect only at the surface itself, and in the direction of the surface, it would be easy to determine the curvature of the surfaces of liquids in the vicinity of the walls that contain them ; these surfaces would be menisci whose tension, [being] constant in every direction, would be everywhere equal to the adhesion of two molecules ; and the phenomena of capillary tubes would have nothing that could not be determined by analysis [i.e., calculus].)
  14. ^ In the 18th century, some investigators did attempt a quantitative treatment of capillary action. See, for example, Alexis Claude Clairaut (1713–1765) Theorie de la Figure de la Terre tirée des Principes de l'Hydrostatique [Theory of the figure of the Earth based on principles of hydrostatics] (Paris, France: David fils, 1743), Chapitre X. De l'élevation ou de l'abaissement des Liqueurs dans les Tuyaux capillaires (Chapter 10. On the elevation or depression of liquids in capillary tubes), pages 105–128. 2016-04-09 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Thomas Young (January 1, 1805) "An essay on the cohesion of fluids," 2014-06-30 at the Wayback Machine Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 95 : 65–87.
  16. ^ Pierre Simon marquis de Laplace, Traité de Mécanique Céleste, volume 4, (Paris, France: Courcier, 1805), Supplément au dixième livre du Traité de Mécanique Céleste, pages 1–79 2016-12-24 at the Wayback Machine.
  17. ^ Carl Friedrich Gauss, Principia generalia Theoriae Figurae Fluidorum in statu Aequilibrii [General principles of the theory of fluid shapes in a state of equilibrium] (Göttingen, (Germany): Dieterichs, 1830). Available on-line at: Hathi Trust.
  18. ^ William Thomson (1871) "On the equilibrium of vapour at a curved surface of liquid," 2014-10-26 at the Wayback Machine Philosophical Magazine, series 4, 42 (282) : 448–452.
  19. ^ Franz Neumann with A. Wangerin, ed., Vorlesungen über die Theorie der Capillarität [Lectures on the theory of capillarity] (Leipzig, Germany: B. G. Teubner, 1894).
  20. ^ Albert Einstein (1901) "Folgerungen aus den Capillaritätserscheinungen" 2017-10-25 at the Wayback Machine (Conclusions [drawn] from capillary phenomena), Annalen der Physik, 309 (3) : 513–523.
  21. ^ Hans-Josef Kuepper. "List of Scientific Publications of Albert Einstein". Einstein-website.de. from the original on 2013-05-08. Retrieved 2013-06-18.
  22. ^ a b c Liu, Mingchao; Wu, Jian; Gan, Yixiang; Hanaor, Dorian A.H.; Chen, C.Q. (2018). "Tuning capillary penetration in porous media: Combining geometrical and evaporation effects" (PDF). International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer. 123: 239–250. doi:10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2018.02.101. S2CID 51914846.
  23. ^ Wang, K.; et al. (2022). "Open Capillary Siphons". Journal of Fluid Mechanics. Cambridge University Press. 932. Bibcode:2022JFM...932R...1W. doi:10.1017/jfm.2021.1056. S2CID 244957617.
  24. ^ Ahrons, Ernest Leopold (1922). Lubrication of Locomotives. London: Locomotive Publishing Company. p. 26. OCLC 795781750.
  25. ^ Tree physics 2013-11-28 at the Wayback Machine at "Neat, Plausible And" scientific discussion website.
  26. ^ Water in Redwood and other trees, mostly by evaporation 2012-01-29 at the Wayback Machine article at wonderquest website.
  27. ^ Poudel, Sajag; Zou, An; Maroo, Shalabh C. (2022-06-15). "Disjoining pressure driven transpiration of water in a simulated tree". Journal of Colloid and Interface Science. 616: 895–902. doi:10.1016/j.jcis.2022.02.108. ISSN 0021-9797.
  28. ^ Ishii D, Horiguchi H, Hirai Y, Yabu H, Matsuo Y, Ijiro K, Tsujii K, Shimozawa T, Hariyama T, Shimomura M (October 23, 2013). "Water transport mechanism through open capillaries analyzed by direct surface modifications on biological surfaces". Scientific Reports. 3: 3024. Bibcode:2013NatSR...3E3024I. doi:10.1038/srep03024. PMC 3805968. PMID 24149467.
  29. ^ Bentley PJ, Blumer WF (1962). "Uptake of water by the lizard, Moloch horridus". Nature. 194 (4829): 699–670 (1962). Bibcode:1962Natur.194..699B. doi:10.1038/194699a0. PMID 13867381. S2CID 4289732.
  30. ^ G.K. Batchelor, 'An Introduction To Fluid Dynamics', Cambridge University Press (1967) ISBN 0-521-66396-2,
  31. ^ Hsai-Yang Fang, john L. Daniels, Introductory Geotechnical Engineering: An Environmental Perspective
  32. ^ "Capillary Tubes - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics". www.sciencedirect.com. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  33. ^ Liu, M.; et al. (2016). "Evaporation limited radial capillary penetration in porous media" (PDF). Langmuir. 32 (38): 9899–9904. doi:10.1021/acs.langmuir.6b02404. PMID 27583455.
  34. ^ C. Hall, W.D. Hoff, Water transport in brick, stone, and concrete. (2002) page 131 on Google books 2014-02-20 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ Hall and Hoff, p. 122

Further reading

  • de Gennes, Pierre-Gilles; Brochard-Wyart, Françoise; Quéré, David (2004). Capillarity and Wetting Phenomena. Springer New York. doi:10.1007/978-0-387-21656-0. ISBN 978-1-4419-1833-8.

capillary, action, this, article, about, physical, phenomenon, band, capillary, action, band, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged. This article is about the physical phenomenon For the band see Capillary Action band This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Capillary action news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Capillary action sometimes called capillarity capillary motion capillary rise capillary effect or wicking is the process of a liquid flowing in a narrow space without the assistance of or even in opposition to any external forces like gravity The effect can be seen in the drawing up of liquids between the hairs of a paint brush in a thin tube in porous materials such as paper and plaster in some non porous materials such as sand and liquefied carbon fiber or in a biological cell It occurs because of intermolecular forces between the liquid and surrounding solid surfaces If the diameter of the tube is sufficiently small then the combination of surface tension which is caused by cohesion within the liquid and adhesive forces between the liquid and container wall act to propel the liquid citation needed Capillary water flow up a 225 mm high porous brick after it was placed in a shallow tray of water The time elapsed after first contact with water is indicated From the weight increase the estimated porosity is 25 Capillary action of water polar compared to mercury non polar in each case with respect to a polar surface such as glass Si OH Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Phenomena and physics 4 Examples 4 1 In plants and animals 5 Height of a meniscus 5 1 Capillary rise of liquid in a capillary 5 2 Capillary rise of liquid between two glass plates 6 Liquid transport in porous media 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingEtymology EditCapillary comes from the Latin word capillaris meaning of or resembling hair The meaning stems from the tiny hairlike diameter of a capillary While capillary is usually used as a noun the word also is used as an adjective as in capillary action in which a liquid is moved along even upward against gravity as the liquid is attracted to the internal surface of the capillaries History EditThe first recorded observation of capillary action was by Leonardo da Vinci 1 2 A former student of Galileo Niccolo Aggiunti was said to have investigated capillary action 3 In 1660 capillary action was still a novelty to the Irish chemist Robert Boyle when he reported that some inquisitive French Men had observed that when a capillary tube was dipped into water the water would ascend to some height in the Pipe Boyle then reported an experiment in which he dipped a capillary tube into red wine and then subjected the tube to a partial vacuum He found that the vacuum had no observable influence on the height of the liquid in the capillary so the behavior of liquids in capillary tubes was due to some phenomenon different from that which governed mercury barometers 4 Others soon followed Boyle s lead 5 Some e g Honore Fabri 6 Jacob Bernoulli 7 thought that liquids rose in capillaries because air could not enter capillaries as easily as liquids so the air pressure was lower inside capillaries Others e g Isaac Vossius 8 Giovanni Alfonso Borelli 9 Louis Carre 10 Francis Hauksbee 11 Josia Weitbrecht 12 thought that the particles of liquid were attracted to each other and to the walls of the capillary Although experimental studies continued during the 18th century 13 a successful quantitative treatment of capillary action 14 was not attained until 1805 by two investigators Thomas Young of the United Kingdom 15 and Pierre Simon Laplace of France 16 They derived the Young Laplace equation of capillary action By 1830 the German mathematician Carl Friedrich Gauss had determined the boundary conditions governing capillary action i e the conditions at the liquid solid interface 17 In 1871 the British physicist Sir William Thomson later Lord Kelvin determined the effect of the meniscus on a liquid s vapor pressure a relation known as the Kelvin equation 18 German physicist Franz Ernst Neumann 1798 1895 subsequently determined the interaction between two immiscible liquids 19 Albert Einstein s first paper which was submitted to Annalen der Physik in 1900 was on capillarity 20 21 Phenomena and physics Edit Moderate rising damp on an internal wall Capillary flow experiment to investigate capillary flows and phenomena aboard the International Space Station Capillary penetration in porous media shares its dynamic mechanism with flow in hollow tubes as both processes are resisted by viscous forces 22 Consequently a common apparatus used to demonstrate the phenomenon is the capillary tube When the lower end of a glass tube is placed in a liquid such as water a concave meniscus forms Adhesion occurs between the fluid and the solid inner wall pulling the liquid column along until there is a sufficient mass of liquid for gravitational forces to overcome these intermolecular forces The contact length around the edge between the top of the liquid column and the tube is proportional to the radius of the tube while the weight of the liquid column is proportional to the square of the tube s radius So a narrow tube will draw a liquid column along further than a wider tube will given that the inner water molecules cohere sufficiently to the outer ones Examples EditIn the built environment evaporation limited capillary penetration is responsible for the phenomenon of rising damp in concrete and masonry while in industry and diagnostic medicine this phenomenon is increasingly being harnessed in the field of paper based microfluidics 22 In physiology capillary action is essential for the drainage of continuously produced tear fluid from the eye Two canaliculi of tiny diameter are present in the inner corner of the eyelid also called the lacrimal ducts their openings can be seen with the naked eye within the lacrymal sacs when the eyelids are everted Wicking is the absorption of a liquid by a material in the manner of a candle wick Paper towels absorb liquid through capillary action allowing a fluid to be transferred from a surface to the towel The small pores of a sponge act as small capillaries causing it to absorb a large amount of fluid Some textile fabrics are said to use capillary action to wick sweat away from the skin These are often referred to as wicking fabrics after the capillary properties of candle and lamp wicks Capillary action is observed in thin layer chromatography in which a solvent moves vertically up a plate via capillary action In this case the pores are gaps between very small particles Capillary action draws ink to the tips of fountain pen nibs from a reservoir or cartridge inside the pen With some pairs of materials such as mercury and glass the intermolecular forces within the liquid exceed those between the solid and the liquid so a convex meniscus forms and capillary action works in reverse In hydrology capillary action describes the attraction of water molecules to soil particles Capillary action is responsible for moving groundwater from wet areas of the soil to dry areas Differences in soil potential PS m displaystyle Psi m drive capillary action in soil A practical application of capillary action is the capillary action siphon Instead of utilizing a hollow tube as in most siphons this device consists of a length of cord made of a fibrous material cotton cord or string works well After saturating the cord with water one weighted end is placed in a reservoir full of water and the other end placed in a receiving vessel The reservoir must be higher than the receiving vessel citation needed A related but simplified capillary siphon only consists of two hook shaped stainless steel rods whose surface is hydrophilic allowing water to wet the narrow grooves between them 23 Due to capillary action and gravity water will slowly transfer from the reservoir to the receiving vessel This simple device can be used to water houseplants when nobody is home This property is also made use of in the lubrication of steam locomotives wicks of worsted wool are used to draw oil from reservoirs into delivery pipes leading to the bearings 24 In plants and animals Edit Capillary action is seen in many plants and plays a part in transpiration Water is brought high up in trees by branching evaporation at the leaves creating depressurization probably by osmotic pressure added at the roots and possibly at other locations inside the plant especially when gathering humidity with air roots 25 26 27 Capillary action for uptake of water has been described in some small animals such as Ligia exotica 28 and Moloch horridus 29 Height of a meniscus EditCapillary rise of liquid in a capillary Edit Water height in a capillary plotted against capillary diameter The height h of a liquid column is given by Jurin s law 30 h 2 g cos 8 r g r displaystyle h 2 gamma cos theta over rho gr where g displaystyle scriptstyle gamma is the liquid air surface tension force unit length 8 is the contact angle r is the density of liquid mass volume g is the local acceleration due to gravity length square of time 31 and r is the radius of tube As r is in the denominator the thinner the space in which the liquid can travel the further up it goes Likewise lighter liquid and lower gravity increase the height of the column For a water filled glass tube in air at standard laboratory conditions g 0 0728 N m at 20 C r 1000 kg m3 and g 9 81 m s2 Because water spreads on clean glass the effective equilibrium contact angle is approximately zero 32 For these values the height of the water column is h 1 48 10 5 m 2 r displaystyle h approx 1 48 times 10 5 mbox m 2 over r Thus for a 2 m 6 6 ft radius glass tube in lab conditions given above the water would rise an unnoticeable 0 007 mm 0 00028 in However for a 2 cm 0 79 in radius tube the water would rise 0 7 mm 0 028 in and for a 0 2 mm 0 0079 in radius tube the water would rise 70 mm 2 8 in Capillary rise of liquid between two glass plates Edit The product of layer thickness d and elevation height h is constant d h constant the two quantities are inversely proportional The surface of the liquid between the planes is hyperbola Water between two glass plates Liquid transport in porous media Edit Capillary flow in a brick with a sorptivity of 5 0 mm min 1 2 and a porosity of 0 25 When a dry porous medium is brought into contact with a liquid it will absorb the liquid at a rate which decreases over time When considering evaporation liquid penetration will reach a limit dependent on parameters of temperature humidity and permeability This process is known as evaporation limited capillary penetration 22 and is widely observed in common situations including fluid absorption into paper and rising damp in concrete or masonry walls For a bar shaped section of material with cross sectional area A that is wetted on one end the cumulative volume V of absorbed liquid after a time t is V A S t displaystyle V AS sqrt t where S is the sorptivity of the medium in units of m s 1 2 or mm min 1 2 This time dependence relation is similar to Washburn s equation for the wicking in capillaries and porous media 33 The quantity i V A displaystyle i frac V A is called the cumulative liquid intake with the dimension of length The wetted length of the bar that is the distance between the wetted end of the bar and the so called wet front is dependent on the fraction f of the volume occupied by voids This number f is the porosity of the medium the wetted length is then x i f S f t displaystyle x frac i f frac S f sqrt t Some authors use the quantity S f as the sorptivity 34 The above description is for the case where gravity and evaporation do not play a role Sorptivity is a relevant property of building materials because it affects the amount of rising dampness Some values for the sorptivity of building materials are in the table below Sorptivity of selected materials source 35 Material Sorptivity mm min 1 2 Aerated concrete 0 50Gypsum plaster 3 50Clay brick 1 16Mortar 0 70Concrete brick 0 20See also EditBond number Dimensionless number in fluid dynamicsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Bound water Thin layer of water surrounding mineral surfaces Capillary fringe Subsurface layer in which groundwater seeps up from a water table by capillary action Capillary pressure Pressure between two fluids from forces between the fluids and tube walls Capillary wave Wave on the surface of a fluid dominated by surface tension Capillary bridges Minimised surface of liquid commecting two wetted objects Damp proofing Type of moisture control in building construction Darcy s law Equation describing the flow of a fluid through a porous medium Frost flower Thin layer of ice extruded from a plant Frost heaving Upwards swelling of soil during freezing Hindu milk miracle 1995 alleged miracle incidentsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Krogh model Porosimetry Measurement and characterization of the porosity of a material Needle ice Ice column formed when liquid groundwater rises into freezing air Surface tension Tendency of a liquid surface to shrink to reduce surface area Washburn s equation Equation describing the penetration length of a liquid into a capillary tube with time Young Laplace equation Describing pressure difference over an interface in fluid mechanicsReferences Edit See Manuscripts of Leonardo de Vinci Paris vol N folios 11 67 and 74 Guillaume Libri Histoire des sciences mathematiques en Italie depuis la Renaissance des lettres jusqu a la fin du dix septieme siecle History of the mathematical sciences in Italy from the Renaissance until the end of the seventeenth century Paris France Jules Renouard et cie 1840 vol 3 page 54 Archived 2016 12 24 at the Wayback Machine From page 54 Enfin deux observations capitales celle de l action capillaire 7 et celle de la diffraction 8 dont jusqu a present on avait meconnu le veritable auteur sont dues egalement a ce brillant genie Finally two major observations that of capillary action 7 and that of diffraction 8 the true author of which until now had not been recognized are also due to this brilliant genius C Wolf 1857 Vom Einfluss der Temperatur auf die Erscheinungen in Haarrohrchen On the influence of temperature on phenomena in capillary tubes Annalen der Physik und Chemie 101 177 550 576 see footnote on page 551 Archived 2014 06 29 at the Wayback Machine by editor Johann C Poggendorff From page 551 nach Libri Hist des sciences math en Italie T III p 54 in den zu Paris aufbewahrten Handschriften des grossen Kunstlers Leonardo da Vinci gestorben 1519 schon Beobachtungen dieser Art vorfinden according to Libri History of the mathematical sciences in Italy vol 3 p 54 observations of this kind i e of capillary action are already to be found in the manuscripts of the great artist Leonardo da Vinci died 1519 which are preserved in Paris More detailed histories of research on capillary action can be found in David Brewster ed Edinburgh Encyclopaedia Philadelphia Pennsylvania Joseph and Edward Parker 1832 volume 10 pp 805 823 Archived 2016 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Maxwell James Clerk Strutt John William 1911 Capillary Action In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 256 275 John Uri Lloyd 1902 References to capillarity to the end of the year 1900 Archived 2014 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Bulletin of the Lloyd Library and Museum of Botany Pharmacy and Materia Medica 1 4 99 204 In his book of 1759 Giovani Batista Clemente Nelli 1725 1793 stated p 87 that he had un libro di problem vari geometrici ec e di speculazioni ed esperienze fisiche ec a book of various geometric problems and of speculation and physical experiments etc by Aggiunti On pages 91 92 he quotes from this book Aggiunti attributed capillary action to moto occulto hidden secret motion He proposed that mosquitoes butterflies and bees feed via capillary action and that sap ascends in plants via capillary action See Giovambatista Clemente Nelli Saggio di Storia Letteraria Fiorentina del Secolo XVII Essay on Florence s literary history in the 17th century Lucca Italy Vincenzo Giuntini 1759 pp 91 92 Archived 2014 07 27 at the Wayback Machine Robert Boyle New Experiments Physico Mechanical touching the Spring of the Air Oxford England H Hall 1660 pp 265 270 Available on line at Echo Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Berlin Germany Archived 2014 03 05 at the Wayback Machine See for example Robert Hooke 1661 An attempt for the explication of the Phenomena observable in an experiment published by the Right Hon Robert Boyle in the 35th experiment of his Epistolical Discourse touching the Air in confirmation of a former conjecture made by R Hooke pamphlet Hooke s An attempt for the explication was reprinted with some changes in Robert Hooke Micrographia London England James Allestry 1667 pp 12 22 Observ IV Of small Glass Canes Archived 2016 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Geminiano Montanari Pensieri fisico matematici sopra alcune esperienze fatte in Bologna Archived 2016 12 29 at the Wayback Machine Physical mathematical ideas about some experiments done in Bologna Bologna Italy 1667 George Sinclair Ars Nova et Magna Gravitatis et Levitatis Archived 2017 11 03 at the Wayback Machine New and great powers of weight and levity Rotterdam Netherlands Arnold Leers Jr 1669 Johannes Christoph Sturm Collegium Experimentale sive Curiosum Catalog of experiments or Curiosity Nuremberg Norimbergae Germany Wolfgang Moritz Endter amp the heirs of Johann Andreas Endter 1676 See Tentamen VIII Canaliculorum angustiorum recens notata Phaenomena Archived 2014 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Essay 8 Recently noted phenomena of narrow capillaries pp 44 48 See Honorato Fabri Dialogi physici Lyon Lugdunum France 1665 pages 157 ff Archived 2016 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Dialogus Quartus In quo de libratis suspensisque liquoribus amp Mercurio disputatur Dialogue four In which the balance and suspension of liquids and mercury is discussed Honorato Fabri Dialogi physici Lyon Lugdunum France Antoine Molin 1669 pages 267 ff Archived 2017 04 07 at the Wayback Machine Alithophilus Dialogus quartus in quo nonnulla discutiuntur a D Montanario opposita circa elevationem Humoris in canaliculis etc Alithophilus Fourth dialogue in which Dr Montanari s opposition regarding the elevation of liquids in capillaries is utterly refuted Jacob Bernoulli Dissertatio de Gravitate AEtheris Archived 2017 04 07 at the Wayback Machine Amsterdam Netherlands Hendrik Wetsten 1683 Isaac Vossius De Nili et Aliorum Fluminum Origine On the sources of the Nile and other rivers Hague Hagae Comitis Netherlands Adrian Vlacq 1666 pages 3 7 Archived 2017 04 07 at the Wayback Machine chapter 2 Borelli Giovanni Alfonso De motionibus naturalibus a gravitate pendentibus Lyon France 1670 page 385 Cap 8 Prop CLXXXV Chapter 8 Proposition 185 Available on line at Echo Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Berlin Germany Archived 2016 12 23 at the Wayback Machine Carre 1705 Experiences sur les tuyaux Capillaires Archived 2017 04 07 at the Wayback Machine Experiments on capillary tubes Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences pp 241 254 See Francis Hauksbee 1708 Several Experiments Touching the Seeming Spontaneous Ascent of Water Archived 2014 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 26 258 266 Francis Hauksbee Physico mechanical Experiments on Various Subjects London England Self published 1709 pages 139 169 Francis Hauksbee 1711 An account of an experiment touching the direction of a drop of oil of oranges between two glass planes towards any side of them that is nearest press d together Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 27 374 375 Francis Hauksbee 1712 An account of an experiment touching the ascent of water between two glass planes in an hyperbolick figure Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 27 539 540 See Josia Weitbrecht 1736 Tentamen theoriae qua ascensus aquae in tubis capillaribus explicatur Archived 2014 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Theoretical essay in which the ascent of water in capillary tubes is explained Commentarii academiae scientiarum imperialis Petropolitanae Memoirs of the imperial academy of sciences in St Petersburg 8 261 309 Josias Weitbrecht 1737 Explicatio difficilium experimentorum circa ascensum aquae in tubis capillaribus Archived 2014 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Explanation of difficult experiments concerning the ascent of water in capillary tubes Commentarii academiae scientiarum imperialis Petropolitanae Memoirs of the imperial academy of sciences in St Petersburg 9 275 309 For example In 1740 Christlieb Ehregott Gellert 1713 1795 observed that like mercury molten lead would not adhere to glass and therefore the level of molten lead was depressed in a capillary tube See C E Gellert 1740 De phenomenis plumbi fusi in tubis capillaribus On phenomena of molten lead in capillary tubes Commentarii academiae scientiarum imperialis Petropolitanae Memoirs of the imperial academy of sciences in St Petersburg 12 243 251 Available on line at Archive org Archived 2016 03 17 at the Wayback Machine Gaspard Monge 1746 1818 investigated the force between panes of glass that were separated by a film of liquid See Gaspard Monge 1787 Memoire sur quelques effets d attraction ou de repulsion apparente entre les molecules de matiere Archived 2016 03 16 at the Wayback Machine Memoir on some effects of the apparent attraction or repulsion between molecules of matter Histoire de l Academie royale des sciences avec les Memoires de l Academie Royale des Sciences de Paris History of the Royal Academy of Sciences with the Memoirs of the Royal Academy of Sciences of Paris pp 506 529 Monge proposed that particles of a liquid exert on each other a short range force of attraction and that this force produces the surface tension of the liquid From p 529 En supposant ainsi que l adherence des molecules d un liquide n ait d effet sensible qu a la surface meme amp dans le sens de la surface il seroit facile de determiner la courbure des surfaces des liquides dans le voisinage des parois qui les conteinnent ces surfaces seroient des linteaires dont la tension constante dans tous les sens seroit par tout egale a l adherence de deux molecules amp les phenomenes des tubes capillaires n auroient plus rein qui ne put etre determine par l analyse Thus by assuming that the adhesion of a liquid s molecules has a significant effect only at the surface itself and in the direction of the surface it would be easy to determine the curvature of the surfaces of liquids in the vicinity of the walls that contain them these surfaces would be menisci whose tension being constant in every direction would be everywhere equal to the adhesion of two molecules and the phenomena of capillary tubes would have nothing that could not be determined by analysis i e calculus In the 18th century some investigators did attempt a quantitative treatment of capillary action See for example Alexis Claude Clairaut 1713 1765 Theorie de la Figure de la Terre tiree des Principes de l Hydrostatique Theory of the figure of the Earth based on principles of hydrostatics Paris France David fils 1743 Chapitre X De l elevation ou de l abaissement des Liqueurs dans les Tuyaux capillaires Chapter 10 On the elevation or depression of liquids in capillary tubes pages 105 128 Archived 2016 04 09 at the Wayback Machine Thomas Young January 1 1805 An essay on the cohesion of fluids Archived 2014 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London 95 65 87 Pierre Simon marquis de Laplace Traite de Mecanique Celeste volume 4 Paris France Courcier 1805 Supplement au dixieme livre du Traite de Mecanique Celeste pages 1 79 Archived 2016 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Carl Friedrich Gauss Principia generalia Theoriae Figurae Fluidorum in statu Aequilibrii General principles of the theory of fluid shapes in a state of equilibrium Gottingen Germany Dieterichs 1830 Available on line at Hathi Trust William Thomson 1871 On the equilibrium of vapour at a curved surface of liquid Archived 2014 10 26 at the Wayback Machine Philosophical Magazine series 4 42 282 448 452 Franz Neumann with A Wangerin ed Vorlesungen uber die Theorie der Capillaritat Lectures on the theory of capillarity Leipzig Germany B G Teubner 1894 Albert Einstein 1901 Folgerungen aus den Capillaritatserscheinungen Archived 2017 10 25 at the Wayback Machine Conclusions drawn from capillary phenomena Annalen der Physik 309 3 513 523 Hans Josef Kuepper List of Scientific Publications of Albert Einstein Einstein website de Archived from the original on 2013 05 08 Retrieved 2013 06 18 a b c Liu Mingchao Wu Jian Gan Yixiang Hanaor Dorian A H Chen C Q 2018 Tuning capillary penetration in porous media Combining geometrical and evaporation effects PDF International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 123 239 250 doi 10 1016 j ijheatmasstransfer 2018 02 101 S2CID 51914846 Wang K et al 2022 Open Capillary Siphons Journal of Fluid Mechanics Cambridge University Press 932 Bibcode 2022JFM 932R 1W doi 10 1017 jfm 2021 1056 S2CID 244957617 Ahrons Ernest Leopold 1922 Lubrication of Locomotives London Locomotive Publishing Company p 26 OCLC 795781750 Tree physics Archived 2013 11 28 at the Wayback Machine at Neat Plausible And scientific discussion website Water in Redwood and other trees mostly by evaporation Archived 2012 01 29 at the Wayback Machine article at wonderquest website Poudel Sajag Zou An Maroo Shalabh C 2022 06 15 Disjoining pressure driven transpiration of water in a simulated tree Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 616 895 902 doi 10 1016 j jcis 2022 02 108 ISSN 0021 9797 Ishii D Horiguchi H Hirai Y Yabu H Matsuo Y Ijiro K Tsujii K Shimozawa T Hariyama T Shimomura M October 23 2013 Water transport mechanism through open capillaries analyzed by direct surface modifications on biological surfaces Scientific Reports 3 3024 Bibcode 2013NatSR 3E3024I doi 10 1038 srep03024 PMC 3805968 PMID 24149467 Bentley PJ Blumer WF 1962 Uptake of water by the lizard Moloch horridus Nature 194 4829 699 670 1962 Bibcode 1962Natur 194 699B doi 10 1038 194699a0 PMID 13867381 S2CID 4289732 G K Batchelor An Introduction To Fluid Dynamics Cambridge University Press 1967 ISBN 0 521 66396 2 Hsai Yang Fang john L Daniels Introductory Geotechnical Engineering An Environmental Perspective Capillary Tubes an overview ScienceDirect Topics www sciencedirect com Retrieved 2021 10 29 Liu M et al 2016 Evaporation limited radial capillary penetration in porous media PDF Langmuir 32 38 9899 9904 doi 10 1021 acs langmuir 6b02404 PMID 27583455 C Hall W D Hoff Water transport in brick stone and concrete 2002 page 131 on Google books Archived 2014 02 20 at the Wayback Machine Hall and Hoff p 122Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Capillary action de Gennes Pierre Gilles Brochard Wyart Francoise Quere David 2004 Capillarity and Wetting Phenomena Springer New York doi 10 1007 978 0 387 21656 0 ISBN 978 1 4419 1833 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capillary action amp oldid 1140105705, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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