Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
The lower end of a capillary tube of radius 1 mm is dipped vertically into mercury. (a) Find the depression of mercury column in the capillary. (b) If the length dipped inside is half the answer of part (a), find the angle made by the mercury surface at the end of the capillary with the vertical. Surface tension of mercury = 0.465 N m−1 and the contact angle of mercury with glass −135 °.
उत्तर
Given:
Radius of tube r = 1 mm = 10−3 m
Contact angle of mercury with glass θ = 135°
Surface tension of mercury T = 0.465 N/m
Let ρ be the density of mercury.
(a) Depression (h) of mercury level is expressed as follows:
\[\text{ h } = \frac{2T\cos\theta}{r\rho g}\] ....(i)
\[\Rightarrow \text{ h } = \frac{2 \times 0 . 465 \times \cos 135^\circ }{{10}^{- 3} \times 13600 \times \left( 9 . 8 \right)}\]
\[ = 0 . 0053 \text{ m = 5 . 3 mm }\]
(b) If the length dipped inside is half the result obtained above:
New depression h'= \[\frac{h}{2}\]
Let the new contact angle of mercury with glass be θ'.
∴ \[h' = \frac{2T\cos\theta'}{r\rho g}\] ....(ii)
Dividing equation (ii) by (i), we get:
\[\frac{h'}{h} = \frac{\cos\theta'}{\cos\theta}\]
\[ \Rightarrow \cos\theta' = \frac{\cos\theta}{2}\]
\[\Rightarrow \theta = 112^\circ\]
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
Derive Laplace’s law for spherical membrane of bubble due to surface tension.
Fill in the blanks using the word(s) from the list appended with each statement
Surface tension of liquids generally . . . with temperatures (increases / decreases)
State any two characteristics of the angle of contact
A capillary tube of radius 0.50 mm is dipped vertically in a pot of water. Find the difference between the pressure of the water in the tube 5.0 cm below the surface and the atmospheric pressure. Surface tension of water = 0.075 N m−1.
A cubical block of ice floating in water has to support a metal piece weighing 0.5 kg. Water can be the minimum edge of the block so that it does not sink in water? Specific gravity of ice = 0.9.
A cube of ice floats partly in water and partly in K.oil (in the following figure). Find the ratio of the volume of ice immersed in water to that in K.oil. Specific gravity of K.oil is 0.8 and that of ice is 0.9.
A cubical metal block of edge 12 cm floats in mercury with one fifth of the height inside the mercury. Water in it. Find the height of the water column to be poured.
Specific gravity of mercury = 13.6.
Explain the capillary action.
Twenty-seven droplets of water, each of radius 0.1 mm coalesce into a single drop. Find the change in surface energy. Surface tension of water is 0.072 N/m.
The surface tension of a liquid at critical temperature is ______
The wettability of a surface by a liquid depends primarily on
A drop of oil placed on the surface of water spreads out. But a drop of water place on oil contracts to a spherical shape. Why?
Why coffee runs up into a sugar lump (a small cube of sugar) when one corner of the sugar lump is held in the liquid?
The surface tension of the two liquids is respectively 20 and 60 dyne cm-1. The liquids drop from the ends of two tubes of the same radius. The ratio of the weights of the two drops is ______
Two spherical rain drops reach the surface of the earth with terminal velocities having ratio 16 : 9. The ratio of their surface area is ______.
The angle of contact at the interface of water-glass is 0°, Ethylalcohol-glass is 0°, Mercury-glass is 140° and Methyliodide-glass is 30°. A glass capillary is put in a trough containing one of these four liquids. It is observed that the meniscus is convex. The liquid in the trough is ______.
Is surface tension a vector?
When one end of the capillary is dipped in water, the height of water column is 'h'. The upward force of 105 dyne due to surface tension is balanced by the force due to the weight of water column. The inner circumference of capillary is ______.
(Surface tension of water = 7 × 10-2 N/m)
Work done to blow a bubble of volume V is W. The work done in blowing a bubble of volume 2V will be ______.
Find the work done when a drop of mercury of radius 2 mm breaks into 8 equal droplets. [Surface tension of mercury = 0.4855 J/m2].