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Physical Chemistry     20


        other molecules from the liquid. More familiarly, this implies that a liquid will tend to
        adopt the minimum surface area possible. Surfaces are higher energy states than the bulk
        liquid and G surface, the free energy of a surface of area A, is defined by
           G surface=γA

                                                                         −2
                                                                               −1
        where γ is the surface tension of the liquid. Typically, γ ranges between 47×10  N m
                                −2
                                      −1
        for mercury down to 1.8×10  N m   for a liquid with relatively small intermolecular
        interactions such as pentane. It follows that small changes of surface area dA result in an
        amount of work dG given by dG=γ dA.
           In a gas cavity (a volume which is wholly contained by the liquid), the effect of the
        surface tension is to minimize the liquid surface area, and hence the volume of the cavity.
        The outward pressure of the gas opposes this minimization. For a cavity of radius r, the
        pressure difference between the inside and the outside of the cavity, ∆p, is given by:
           ∆p=p gas−p liquid=2γ/r

        The inverse relationship in r means that gas within a small cavity must be at a higher
        pressure than the gas in a large cavity for any given liquid. At very small  radii,  the
        pressure difference becomes impractically large, and is the reason why cavities cannot
        form  in liquids without the presence of  nucleation sites, small cavities of gas in the
        surface of particles within the liquid.
           For bubbles—a volume of gas contained in a thin skin of liquid—two surfaces now
        exist, and the pressure differential between the inside and outside of the bubble becomes:
           ∆p=p inside−p outside=4γ/r



                                       Surfactants
        Surfactants are chemical species which have a tendency to accumulate at surfaces, and
        tend to lower the surface tension of the liquid. A familiar example is a cleaning detergent,
                                                       −
                                                              −
        which is comprised of a hydrophilic head, such as -SO 3  or -CO 2 , and a hydrophobic
        tail, which is usually comprised of a long-chain hydrocarbon. In water or other polar
        solvents, the head group has a tendency to solvation, whilst the tail adopts its lowest free
        energy state outside the solvent. The compromise between these conflicting requirements
        is met at the surface, with the head remaining in the solvent and the tail pointing out of
        the solvent. Above a  critical surfactant concentration and above  the  Krafft
        temperature, surfactant molecules may not only accumulate at the surface, but may also
        form micelles.  Micelles are clusters of between some tens  and  some  thousands  of
        surfactant molecules within a solvent whose tails cluster  within  the  micelle  so  as  to
        maximize the interactions of the tails, leaving a surface of solvated hydrophilic heads.
        Where surfactants are added to water in the presence of greases or fats, the tails may
        solvate  in  the fatty material, leaving a surface of hydrophilic heads. The effect is to
        dissolve the grease in the water, and is the reason for the cleaning properties of detergents
        and soaps.
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