Abstract
This paper describes the development of a new technique for removing surface-active contaminants from water so that it may be used for surface-clean experiments in fluid mechanics. The removal of contamination from concentrated aqueous solutions of non-surface-active materials is also possible, allowing considerable variation of density and viscosity in these experiments. Instead of using the conventional distillation processes necessary for most work involving surface chemical phenomena, surface-active substances are removed by adsorption onto a dense current of small nitrogen gas bubbles rising in a long vertical column of the water. The efficiency of the technique was found to increase to a great extent when common salt was dissolved in the water, up to concentrations around 40 g/l, and experiments are described which allow the identification of several physical processes which aid the operation of the method. The adequate performance of the cleaning technique in the removal both of an ionic surface-active material and also of Gentian Violet dye is demonstrated. The method should permit the design of surface-clean experiments using much larger volumes of water than are possible when the water has to be distilled using conventional surface chemical techniques. A simple apparatus for the measurement of surface tension is also described.

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