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Tensiometry

What is Tensiometry?

Tensiometry measures surface-related properties of liquids and interfaces—most commonly surface tension and interfacial tension. These properties control how liquids wet, spread, bead up, emulsify, and adhere to surfaces. Tensiometry is widely used to evaluate surfactants, coatings, inks, cleaning solutions, emulsions, and process liquids, helping optimize performance in manufacturing and product development.

What Tensiometry Can Help You Solve

  • Wetting and spreading performance on substrates (improved coverage, fewer defects)

  • Surfactant effectiveness and concentration optimization (CMC-related behavior)

  • Cleaning and degreasing efficiency screening for process liquids

  • Coating/ink formulation troubleshooting (poor leveling, pinholes, craters, dewetting)

  • Emulsion stability insights via interfacial tension comparisons (project-dependent)

  • Batch consistency & QC for liquids and formulations

Typical Applications

  • Coatings, paints & varnishes: wetting/leveling control, defect reduction

  • Inks & printing fluids: spreading on films, paper, metals; print uniformity

  • Electronics & semiconductor processes: wet cleaning solutions, rinses, chemical baths

  • Detergents & surfactants: performance screening and product development

  • Oil/water systems: interfacial tension for emulsifiers and separation behavior

  • Adhesives & surface treatments: improved substrate wetting and bonding readiness

Test Capabilities & What You Receive

Measurement Types (project-dependent)

  • Surface tension of liquids (static and/or dynamic, as applicable)

  • Interfacial tension between two immiscible liquids (e.g., oil/water systems)

  • Time-dependent behavior (adsorption kinetics / dynamic tension for some systems)

  • Concentration series testing (useful for surfactants and formulation optimization)

Deliverables

  • Surface/interfacial tension results with measurement conditions (temperature, method, timing)

  • Trend plots (optional) for concentration series or time-dependent studies

  • Pass/fail or comparison vs your specification (if provided)

  • Interpretation notes tied to wetting/coating/cleaning performance

Sample Requirements

  • Sample types: liquids, surfactant solutions, process chemicals, inks, coatings (liquid), oils

  • Typical volume: usually 10–50 mL per sample (depends on method and repeats)

  • Condition: homogeneous, minimal bubbles/particles; avoid contamination from dirty containers

  • Packaging: clean, tightly sealed containers to prevent evaporation and contamination

  • Information to provide: solvent system, expected tension range, temperature requirement, and whether the sample is volatile or hazardous (SDS if needed)

Workflow

  • Requirement review (surface vs interfacial; static vs dynamic; temperature; spec limits)

  • Sample preparation (mixing, degassing if appropriate, temperature equilibration)

  • Instrument setup & verification (method selection and checks)

  • Measurement with defined timing/conditions

  • Data analysis (averaging, trends, comparisons)

  • Reporting (results + conditions + conclusions)

FAQs

Surface tension refers to the interface between a liquid and air (or vapor). Interfacial tension refers to the interface between two liquids (e.g., oil and water).

Surface tension is a key factor, but wetting also depends on the solid surface energy and cleanliness. For complete wetting evaluation, we may recommend contact angle measurements in addition to tensiometry.

Some systems show dynamic surface tension due to surfactant adsorption kinetics or solvent evaporation. We can measure time dependence if it’s relevant to your process.

Use clean containers, avoid touching the inside surfaces, seal samples promptly, and minimize exposure to dust or vapors. Even trace contaminants can shift surface tension.

A concentration series can often indicate CMC-related behavior by observing where surface tension plateaus. Final interpretation depends on system complexity and test design.

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