Porous Materials, Inc > Products > Porometers > Cartridge Bubble Point Tester

Cartridge Bubble Point Tester

<< Back to the Porometers Page

Description

The cartridge bubble point tester accommodates cartridges having a wide range of sizes, facilitates quick and easy loading and unloading of cartridges, performs speedy high volume testing, measures pores on all sides of the cartridge, conserves the wetting liquid by circulating from a storage tank, and ventilates the sample chamber. It has many applications throughout the filtration industry.

Principles of Operation

A wetting liquid spontaneously fills the pores of a porous material, because the surface free energy of filtration media with wetting liquids is less than the surface free energy of the filtration media with air and the filling process is accompanied by a decrease in free energy. The wetting liquid cannot spontaneously come out of the pores. It can be removed from the pores by increasing differential pressure of a nonreacting gas on the sample. The testing technique involves measurement of gas flow rates through a wet sample as a function of differential pressure. The gas pressure needed to displace a wetting liquid from a pore is related to the pore diameter.

p = 4 γ cos θ / D

where, p is differential inert gas pressure on the wetting liquid in the pore, γ is the surface tension of the wetting liquid, θ is the contact angle of the wetting liquid with the pore of the filtration media, and D is pore diameter [1].

The diameter of a pore can change along pore path and a pore can have many diameters. The presence of a pore is detected by this technique only when the differential gas pressure is able to completely empty the pore to permit gas flow through the pore. The differential pressure capable of completely emptying a pore is the differential pressure needed to displace the wetting liquid from the pore throat. Therefore, the pore diameter computed from the measured differential pressure yields only the through pore throat diameter (Figure 1). No other diameter of the pore is measured.

Figure 1
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 2

The gas flow through the wet sample is zero at the beginning and does not increase with increase in differential pressure, because all the pores are filled with the wetting liquid (Figure 2). The first pore to be emptied at the lowest pressure is the pore with the largest throat diameter (Equation 1). The differential pressure that initiates gas flow through a wet sample yields the bubble point pressure and the largest through pore throat diameter (Figure 2). A special technique is used to accurately detect the bubble point pressure [2].

Unique Features

Photo 1
Photo 1
Photo 2
Photo 2
Photo 3
Photo 3
Diagram 1
Diagram 1

Specifications

0.1 - 500 microns (Models with pore size down to 0.013 microns also available)
Pore Size Range
1.75" - 2.5" diameter
Sample Size
Customized available
Sample Chambers
0 - 100 psi
Maximum Range
Clean, dry, compressed air or nonflammable, non-corrosive gas
Pressurizing Gas
0-100 psi Absolute
Pressure Transducer Range
1 in 10,000
Resolution
0.15% of reading
Accuracy
0 - 10 cc/minute
Mass Flow Transducer Range
110/220 VAC, 50/60 Hz (Others available)
Power Requirements
70" H x 28" W x 30" D
Dimensions
250 lbs
Weight

For more information see our Bubble Point Test Brochure, Porometers Brochure, and Characterization of Pore Structure Brochure.

Back to the Top

<< Back to the Porometers Page