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Liquid-solid flotation glasses

Foam Production This is important in froth-flotation separations in the manufacture of cellular elastomers, plastics, and glass and in certain special applications (e.g., food products, fire extinguishers). Unwanted foam can occur in process columns, in agitated vessels, and in reactors in which a gaseous product is formed it must be avoided, destroyed, or controlled. Berkman and Egloff (Emulsions and Foams, Reinhold, New York, 1941, pp. 112—152) have mentioned that foam is produced only in systems possessing the proper combination of interfacial tension, viscosity, volatility, and concentration of solute or suspended solids. From the standpoint of gas comminution, foam production requires the creation of small bubbles in a liquid capable of sustaining foam. [Pg.100]

This method has been employed to measure the critical wetting surface tensions of particles of sulfur, silver iodide, methylated glass beads, quartz, paraffin-wax-coated coal, and surfactant-coated pyrite. Generally. Fuerstenau and coworkers [106-115] found that the film flotation technique is sensitive to the surface hydrophobicity and the heterogeneity of the particles. It was found that particle size, particle shape, particle density, film flotation time, and the nature of the wetting liquids have negligible effects on the results of film flotation. But the liquid and the solid particles used in the experiments must not have any chemical interactions. [Pg.65]


See other pages where Liquid-solid flotation glasses is mentioned: [Pg.639]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.425]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.374]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.471 ]




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Liquid-solid flotation

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