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    In physics, Washburn's equation describes capillary flow in porous materials.
    It is


    L^2= rac

    where t is the time for a liquid of viscosity eta and surface tension gamma to penetrate a distance L into a fully wettable, porous material whose average pore diameter is D.

    The equation is derived for capillary flow in a cylindrical tube in the absence of a gravitational field, but according to physicist Len Fisher can be extremely accurate for more complex materials including biscuits (see dunk (biscuit)). Following National biscuit dunking day, some newspaper articles quoted the equation as Fisher's equation.

    ----

    In his paper from 1921 Washburn applies Poiseuille's law for fluid motion
    in a circular tube. Inserting the expression for the differential volume in terms
    of the length l of fluid in the tube dV=pi r^2 dl,
    one obtains

    rac= rac(r^4 +4 epsilon r^3)

    where sum P is the sum over the participating pressures, such as the atmospheric pressure P_A, the hydrostatic pressure P_h and the equivalent pressure due to capillary forces P_c. eta is the viscosity of the liquid, and epsilon is the coefficient of slip, which is assumed to be 0 for wetting materials. r is the radius of the capillary. The pressures in turn
    can be written as

    P_h=h g
    ho - l g
    hosinpsi

    P_c= raccosphi

    where
    ho is the density of the liquid and gamma its surface tension. psi is the angle of the tube with respect to the horizontal axis. phi is the contact angle of the liquid on the capillary material.
    Substituting these expressions leads to the first-order differential equation for
    the distance the fluid penetrates into the tube l:

    rac= rac

    The solutions of this differential equation are also discussed in this paper.



        Washburn's equation
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Washburn's equation". link