JesseLai
Chemical
- Jul 16, 2010
- 2
Hi
I am trying to figure out how foam growth in hydrocarbon is related to surface tension. My understanding is that as surface tension decreases, foam height grows with injection of N2 gas in isotherm environment. Then after injection of silicon antifoam, the liquid's surface tension increases. Is that right?
My second question is what happens to surface tension at higher temperature? For example, I heated the vacuum residuum to 850F. The residuum started to crack at 750F and produced vapor;subsequently, foaming occurred. Is it still the same trend,i.e. decreasing surface tension increases foam height in high temperature isotherm like 850F ?
Regards,
Jesse Lai
I am trying to figure out how foam growth in hydrocarbon is related to surface tension. My understanding is that as surface tension decreases, foam height grows with injection of N2 gas in isotherm environment. Then after injection of silicon antifoam, the liquid's surface tension increases. Is that right?
My second question is what happens to surface tension at higher temperature? For example, I heated the vacuum residuum to 850F. The residuum started to crack at 750F and produced vapor;subsequently, foaming occurred. Is it still the same trend,i.e. decreasing surface tension increases foam height in high temperature isotherm like 850F ?
Regards,
Jesse Lai