Interfacial Tension of the Water-Diluted Bitumen Interface at High Bitumen Concentrations Measured Using a Microfluidic Technique.
Sachin GoelNiyati JoshiMuhammad Siraj UddinSamson NgEdgar J AcostaArun RamachandranPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2019)
The interfacial tension (IFT) is a critical parameter to inform our understanding of the phenomena of drop breakup and droplet-droplet coalescence in sheared water-in-diluted bitumen (dilbit) emulsions. A microfluidic extensional flow device (MEFD) was used to determine the IFT of the dilbit-water emulsion system for bitumen concentrations of 33%, 50%, and 67% by weight (solvent to bitumen ratio (S/B) = 2, 1, and 0.5, respectively) and two different pH values of water: 8.3 and 9.9. The IFT was observed to increase with the bitumen concentration and decrease significantly upon lowering the water pH. The time scale for achieving the steady state IFT increased with bitumen concentration and was less sensitive to the water pH. But the most important feature of our measurements is that the IFTs recorded were significantly smaller than the values reported in the literature. We recognized two important differences between our studies and prior investigations: measurement of the IFT of water drops in dilbit as opposed to dilbit drops in water in earlier studies, and time scales of measurement of IFT that ranged from hundreds of milliseconds to a few seconds, as compared to a minute or longer in past investigations. These differences were examined carefully, but neither was found to explain the low IFTs measured in our studies. Our work leads to the following hypothesis: the mechanical properties of the interface of a sheared water drop in bitumen are significantly different from a stagnant one.