A continuum thermodynamic model of the influence of non-ionic surfactant on mass transfer from gas bubbles
Dieter Bothe, Akio Tomiyama

TL;DR
This paper develops and experimentally validates a continuum thermodynamic model that captures how non-ionic surfactants affect gas bubble mass transfer by influencing interfacial tension and introducing transfer resistance.
Contribution
It introduces an extended sharp-interface model that accounts for surfactant-induced mass transfer hindrance through area-specific concentrations and sorption processes.
Findings
Model accurately predicts mass transfer reduction due to surfactants.
Quantitative agreement with experimental CO₂ bubble dissolution data.
Highlights the importance of surfactant coverage in mass transfer dynamics.
Abstract
Mass transfer of gaseous components from rising bubbles to the ambient liquid depends not only on the chemical potential difference of the transfer component but also on the interfacial free energy and composition. The latter is strongly affected by surface active agents that are present in many applications. Surfactants lead to local changes in the interfacial tension, which influence the mass transfer rates in two different ways. On the one hand, inhomogeneous interfacial tension leads to Marangoni stress, which can strongly change the local hydrodynamics. One the other hand, the coverage by surfactant molecules results in a mass transfer resistance. This hindrance effect is not included in current continuum physical models. The present work provides the experimental validation of a recently introduced extended sharp-interface model for two-phase flows with mass transfer that also…
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