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15.3.12

Biomedical importance of surface tension

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Biomedical importance of surface tension. 15.3.12. Surface Tension. The force with which surface molecules are held is called the surface tension of the liquid - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Biomedical importance of surface tension

15.3.12

Page 2: Biomedical importance of surface tension
Page 3: Biomedical importance of surface tension
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The force with which surface molecules are held is called the surface tension of the liquid

It is the force acting perpendicularly inward on the surface layer of a liquid to pull its surface molecules towards the interior of the fluid

It keeps the surface like a stretched membrane, and hence keeps the contact area minimum

Page 7: Biomedical importance of surface tension

Water striders use surface tension to walk on the surface of pond. The surface of the water behaves like an elastic film: the insect's feet cause indentations in the water's surface, increasing its surface area and thus decreasing surface tension at those points. Its tiny mass and geometry of its legs allow it to be supported by the high surface tension of water

Formation of drops occurs when a mass of liquid is stretched. Water adhering to the tap gains mass until it is stretched to a point where the surface tension can no longer bind it to the tap. It then separates and surface tension forms the drop into a sphere. If a stream of water were running from the tap, the stream would break up into drops during its fall. Gravity stretches the stream, then surface tension pinches it into spheres

Page 8: Biomedical importance of surface tension

Surface tension at liquid-air interface: A soap bubble is a thin film of soapy water enclosing air that forms a hollow sphere. Surface tension causes a bubble to assume the smallest surface area to contain a given volume -- resulting in the spherical shape

Liquid-solid interfaceBeading of rain water on the surface of a waxy surface, such as a leaf. Water adheres weakly to wax and strongly to itself, so water clusters into drops. Surface tension gives them their near-spherical shape, because a sphere has the smallest possible surface area to volume ratio

Liquid-Liquid interfaceSeparation of oil and water (in this case, water and liquid wax) is caused by a tension in the surface between dissimilar liquids.

Page 9: Biomedical importance of surface tension

TemperatureSurface tension falls with rise in temperature hence increasing the surface areaMajor reason for using hot water for washing is that its surface tension is lower and it is a better wetting agent

SoluteSolutes can have different effects on surface tension depending on their structure:Little or no effect, for example sugarIncrease surface tension, inorganic saltsDecrease surface tension progressively, alcoholsDecrease surface tension and, once a minimum is reached, no more effect: surfactants

Page 10: Biomedical importance of surface tension

According to this principle substances which lower the surface tension becomes concentrated in the surface layer whereas substances which increase surface tension are distributed in the interior of the liquid

Lipids and proteins effective in lowering surface tension are found concentrated in the cell wall

Soaps and bile salts reduce the surface tension of water while sodium chloride and most inorganic salts increase the surface tension

Page 11: Biomedical importance of surface tension

Surface tension of plasma is slightly less than water Emulsifying action of Bile salts

Bile salts are surface active. They facilitate action of pancreatic lipase and hence absorption of free fatty acids. Bile salts lowers surface tension of fat droplets

Hay’s testThis test is based on the surface tension and is employed for detecting the presence of bile salts in urine (an indication of jaundice). If urine contains bile salts, the fine sulfur powder sprinkled on its surface settles down due to lowering of surface tension. Fine sulfur continues to float on the surface if urine does not contain bile salts

Page 12: Biomedical importance of surface tension

Laplace’s law states that the pressure inside an inflated elastic container with a curved surface, e.g., a bubble is inversely proportional to the radius as long as the surface tension is presumed to change little.

A common illustration of this phenomenon is that the effort required to blow up a balloon is greatest when the diameter of the balloon is least

Page 13: Biomedical importance of surface tension

Alveoli can be compared to gas in water, as the alveoli are wet and surround a central air space. The surface tension acts at the air-water interface and tends to make the bubble smaller (by decreasing the surface area of the interface).

Surfactant is a lipoprotein mixture secreted by special surfactants secreting cells i. e. type II granular pneumocytes present in alveolar epithelium

Page 14: Biomedical importance of surface tension

On the basis of Laplace law, air would be displaced from the smaller alveolus into the larger one and the smaller alveolus would thus become still smaller

This process would continue until the smaller alveolus would collapse entirely while displacing all of its air into the larger one

This process would lead to instability of alveoli

Page 15: Biomedical importance of surface tension

Instability is prevented by surfactant. As an alveolus becomes smaller the surfactant becomes more concentrated at the surface of alveolar lining fluid. Hence surface tension becomes progressively more less

On the other hand as an alveolus becomes bigger, the surfactant is spread more thinly on the fluid surface. This increases the surface tension

This property of surfactant stabilizes the sizes of the alveoli, causing the larger alveoli to contract more and smaller ones to contract less.

The absence of surfactant in the alveolar membrane of some premature infants causes the respiratory stress syndrome in them

Factors reducing production of surfactant or increasing its rate of destruction may contribute to adult respiratory distresss syndrome