Blodgett Double

BLODGETT DOUBLE STONE DECK NAT GAS PIZZA OVEN
BLODGETT DOUBLE STONE DECK NAT GAS PIZZA OVEN
$2,399.00
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Blodgett Double Stack Electric Pizza Conveyor Oven model SG3240F on castors used
Blodgett Double Stack Electric Pizza Conveyor Oven model SG3240F on castors used
$3,500.00
Time Remaining: 5d 4h 18m
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Blodgett 961 Double Stack Commercial Gas Pizza Oven w Stones Tech Tested
Blodgett 961 Double Stack Commercial Gas Pizza Oven w Stones Tech Tested
$4,499.00
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BLODGETT DOUBLE BAKING CHAMBER COMMERCIAL GAS DECK PIZZA OVENS 4 BAKING CHAMBERS
BLODGETT DOUBLE BAKING CHAMBER COMMERCIAL GAS DECK PIZZA OVENS 4 BAKING CHAMBERS
$4,595.00
Time Remaining: 16d 17h
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Blodgett Combi Oven BX 14E BL Double Steam Oven
Blodgett Combi Oven BX 14E BL Double Steam Oven
$3,400.00
Time Remaining: 6d 21h 58m
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Blodgett 911P Oven Double Door Dual Door Gas Commercial Pizza
Blodgett 911P Oven Double Door Dual Door Gas Commercial Pizza
$1,499.99
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 COMMERCIAL DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION RESTAURANT OVEN NAT G
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 COMMERCIAL DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION RESTAURANT OVEN NAT G
$3,725.00
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2007 Double Stack Blodgett Conveyor Pizza Oven 3 phase 208 volt NICE CLEAN
2007 Double Stack Blodgett Conveyor Pizza Oven 3 phase 208 volt NICE CLEAN
$7,900.00
Time Remaining: 25d 4h 37m
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Blodgett Mark V Double Stack Electric Convection Oven Bakery Pies Cake Bread Pie
Blodgett Mark V Double Stack Electric Convection Oven Bakery Pies Cake Bread Pie
$3,995.00
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Blodgett Zephaire Double Gas Convection Baking Oven Bread Pastry Cake Pie S S
Blodgett Zephaire Double Gas Convection Baking Oven Bread Pastry Cake Pie S S
$3,995.00
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Blodgett Model 981 Double Stack Deck Oven NAT Gas w Stones PIZZA RESTAURANT
Blodgett Model 981 Double Stack Deck Oven NAT Gas w Stones PIZZA RESTAURANT
$3,995.00
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BLODGETT DOUBLE OVEN ELECTRIC BEAUTIFUL SHAPE
BLODGETT DOUBLE OVEN ELECTRIC BEAUTIFUL SHAPE
$2,399.99
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BLODGETT DOUBLE ELECTRIC CONVECTION OVEN MODEL EF111
BLODGETT DOUBLE ELECTRIC CONVECTION OVEN MODEL EF111
$2,150.10
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Blodgett Double Stack Conveyor Ovens 2006 2007 Model 208 3 or 1 Phase
Blodgett Double Stack Conveyor Ovens 2006 2007 Model 208 3 or 1 Phase
$5,000.00
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BLODGETT OVEN DOUBLE STACKED MODEL931 901
BLODGETT OVEN DOUBLE STACKED MODEL931 901
$3,300.00
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BLODGETT COMMERCIAL GAS CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE DECK SHO
BLODGETT COMMERCIAL GAS CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE DECK SHO
$5,590.00
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Used Blodgett Double Deck Commercial Pizza Oven Great Shape 911P CLEAN
Used Blodgett Double Deck Commercial Pizza Oven Great Shape 911P CLEAN
$7,891.49
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BLODGETT EF 111 ELECTRIC DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION OVEN
BLODGETT EF 111 ELECTRIC DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION OVEN
$3,295.00
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Blodgett Double Convection Oven Model EF 111 Electric
Blodgett Double Convection Oven Model EF 111 Electric
$2,750.00
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New Oven Legs 6Long 4 pcs 1 set for Blodgett Double three deck Oven
New Oven Legs 6Long 4 pcs 1 set for Blodgett Double three deck Oven
$159.00
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Double Stack Gas Pizza Oven Blodgett 961P Deck Commercial Restaurant Pizzaria
Double Stack Gas Pizza Oven Blodgett 961P Deck Commercial Restaurant Pizzaria
$4,500.00
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USED BLODGETT ST300 AA S COMMERCIAL S S NGAS DOUBLE STACK VIEW DOOR CONVECTION
USED BLODGETT ST300 AA S COMMERCIAL S S NGAS DOUBLE STACK VIEW DOOR CONVECTION
$3,925.00
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HEAVY DUTY COMMERCIAL GRADE DOUBLE STACK BLODGETT COUNTER TOP N GAS PIZZA OVEN
HEAVY DUTY COMMERCIAL GRADE DOUBLE STACK BLODGETT COUNTER TOP N GAS PIZZA OVEN
$2,499.99
Time Remaining: 4d 8h 37m

Double Stack Blodgett Pizza Ovens 951 Bottom  981 Top
Double Stack Blodgett Pizza Ovens 951 Bottom 981 Top
$4,500.00
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Blodgett 901 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 901 DOUBLE Oven
$10,705.75
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Blodgett Double Stack Oven
Blodgett Double Stack Oven
$1,999.00
Time Remaining: 14d 35m
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Blodgett  961   966 Bakers Baking Gas Deck Double Stack Oven Pizza
Blodgett 961 966 Bakers Baking Gas Deck Double Stack Oven Pizza
$4,150.00
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Blodgett 911 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 911 DOUBLE Oven
$10,045.75
Time Remaining: 25d 23h
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BLODGETT B 14G GAS DOUBLE COMBI OVEN STEAMER
BLODGETT B 14G GAS DOUBLE COMBI OVEN STEAMER
$8,500.00
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 NAT GAS DOUBLE STACK DUAL FLOW RESTAURANT CONVECTION OVE
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 NAT GAS DOUBLE STACK DUAL FLOW RESTAURANT CONVECTION OVE
$3,325.00
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BLODGETT ELECTRIC CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE DECK SHO E
BLODGETT ELECTRIC CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE DECK SHO E
$5,590.00
Time Remaining: 9d 21h 59m
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Blodgett Double Stack Deck Oven Pizza
Blodgett Double Stack Deck Oven Pizza
$6,500.00
Time Remaining: 4d 17h 7m
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 DOUBLE STACK RESTAURANT CONVECTION OVEN NATURAL GAS
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 DOUBLE STACK RESTAURANT CONVECTION OVEN NATURAL GAS
$3,325.00
Time Remaining: 22d 1h 48m
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BLODGETT 961 DOUBLE STACK STONE DECK NAT GAS BAKING PIZZA BAKING OVEN
BLODGETT 961 DOUBLE STACK STONE DECK NAT GAS BAKING PIZZA BAKING OVEN
$4,495.00
Time Remaining: 11d 16h 53m
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Blodgett 1415 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 1415 DOUBLE Oven
$6,660.50
Time Remaining: 25d 23h 34m
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Blodgett 1060 Double Deck Gas Oven
Blodgett 1060 Double Deck Gas Oven
$19,105.00
Time Remaining: 26d 8h 2m
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Blodgett HV 50E DOUBLE HydroVection Convection Oven
Blodgett HV 50E DOUBLE HydroVection Convection Oven
$21,518.75
Time Remaining: 25d 23h
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 FULL SIZE DUAL FLOW NAT GAS CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE DECK
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 FULL SIZE DUAL FLOW NAT GAS CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE DECK
$3,325.00
Time Remaining: 17d 38m
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BLODGETT DOUBLE DECKS PIZZA BAKERY OVEN GAS900 ITEMS ON EBAY FREE SHIPPING
BLODGETT DOUBLE DECKS PIZZA BAKERY OVEN GAS900 ITEMS ON EBAY FREE SHIPPING
$4,950.00
Time Remaining: 10d 10h 2m
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Blodgett 1000 Stainless Steel Gas Pizza Baking Brick Roasting Oven Double Deck
Blodgett 1000 Stainless Steel Gas Pizza Baking Brick Roasting Oven Double Deck
$4,995.00
Time Remaining: 16d 21h 27m
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Blodgett 1210 Double Stack Pizza Stone Deck Oven Electric
Blodgett 1210 Double Stack Pizza Stone Deck Oven Electric
$5,895.00
Time Remaining: 23d 7h 53m
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REFURBISHED BLODGETT CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE BAKERY XTRA DEEP RE 44 BIGGER MARK V
REFURBISHED BLODGETT CONVECTION OVEN DOUBLE BAKERY XTRA DEEP RE 44 BIGGER MARK V
$5,995.95
Time Remaining: 1d 2h 52m
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Blodgett 1060 DOUBLE Pizza Oven
Blodgett 1060 DOUBLE Pizza Oven
$19,104.25
Time Remaining: 25d 23h 14m
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BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK BAKING OVEN
BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK BAKING OVEN
$2,000.00
Time Remaining: 1d 22h 34m

USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 GAS DOUBLE STACK RESTAURANT CONVECTION OVEN
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 GAS DOUBLE STACK RESTAURANT CONVECTION OVEN
$3,325.00
Time Remaining: 17d 18m
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 GAS DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION BAKERY RESTAURANT OVEN
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 GAS DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION BAKERY RESTAURANT OVEN
$3,325.00
Time Remaining: 9d 28m
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Blodgett 911P DOUBLE Pizza Oven
Blodgett 911P DOUBLE Pizza Oven
$13,158.75
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett CTB DOUBLE Convection Oven
Blodgett CTB DOUBLE Convection Oven
$9,944.00
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett 981 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 981 DOUBLE Oven
$12,526.25
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett 966 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 966 DOUBLE Oven
$14,143.25
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett 951 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 951 DOUBLE Oven
$11,585.75
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett 961 DOUBLE Oven
Blodgett 961 DOUBLE Oven
$11,723.25
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett 1048 DOUBLE Pizza Oven
Blodgett 1048 DOUBLE Pizza Oven
$16,310.25
Time Remaining: 25d 23h
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION BAKERY RESTAURANT GAS OVEN
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 DOUBLE STACK CONVECTION BAKERY RESTAURANT GAS OVEN
$3,325.00
Time Remaining: 10d 38m
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USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 NAT GAS DOUBLE STACK DUAL FLOW CONVECTION OVEN
USED BLODGETT DFG 100 3 NAT GAS DOUBLE STACK DUAL FLOW CONVECTION OVEN
$3,325.00
Time Remaining: 17d 18m
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Blodgett 961P DOUBLE Pizza Oven
Blodgett 961P DOUBLE Pizza Oven
$13,406.25
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett DFG50 DOUBLE Convection Oven
Blodgett DFG50 DOUBLE Convection Oven
$11,261.25
Time Remaining: 25d 23h
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Blodgett MARK V DOUBLE Convection Oven
Blodgett MARK V DOUBLE Convection Oven
$13,590.50
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett DFG100 DOUBLE Convection Oven
Blodgett DFG100 DOUBLE Convection Oven
$14,819.75
Time Remaining: 25d 23h
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Blodgett DFG200 DOUBLE Convection Oven
Blodgett DFG200 DOUBLE Convection Oven
$15,265.25
Time Remaining: 25d 23h 14m
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Blodgett 966 Double Deck Oven Gas Very Good Condition
Blodgett 966 Double Deck Oven Gas Very Good Condition
$7,870.00
Time Remaining: 15d 23h 43m
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Blodgett DFG200 DOUBLE RI Roll In Convection Oven
Blodgett DFG200 DOUBLE RI Roll In Convection Oven
$17,292.00
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett DFG100 DOUBLE RI Roll In Convection Oven
Blodgett DFG100 DOUBLE RI Roll In Convection Oven
$16,846.50
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett MARK V DOUBLE RI Roll In Convection Oven
Blodgett MARK V DOUBLE RI Roll In Convection Oven
$15,617.25
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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HEAVY DUTY COMMERCIAL GRADE DOUBLE STACK BLODGETT N GAS PIZZA OVEN
HEAVY DUTY COMMERCIAL GRADE DOUBLE STACK BLODGETT N GAS PIZZA OVEN
$799.99
Time Remaining: 7d 22h 56m

Blodgett ZEPHAIRE E Double Deck Electric Convection Oven
Blodgett ZEPHAIRE E Double Deck Electric Convection Oven
$6,249.00
Time Remaining: 9d 9h 15m
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Blodgett HV 100E DOUBLE HydroVection Convection Oven
Blodgett HV 100E DOUBLE HydroVection Convection Oven
$23,941.50
Time Remaining: 25d 22h 59m
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Blodgett Mark VXCEL DOUBLE Xcel Convection Oven Electric Double Deck NSF
Blodgett Mark VXCEL DOUBLE Xcel Convection Oven Electric Double Deck NSF
$13,330.00
Time Remaining: 4d 3h 33m
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BLODGETT ELEC DOUBLE CONVECTION OVEN ZEPHAIRE E DBL
BLODGETT ELEC DOUBLE CONVECTION OVEN ZEPHAIRE E DBL
$8,650.00
Time Remaining: 5d 18h 39m
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Blodgett DFG100XCEL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck Converts 60000 80000 BTU
Blodgett DFG100XCEL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck Converts 60000 80000 BTU
$14,537.50
Time Remaining: 4d 3h 33m
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Blodgett Zephaire G DBL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck 120000 BTU ETL CE NSF
Blodgett Zephaire G DBL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck 120000 BTU ETL CE NSF
$11,147.50
Time Remaining: 4d 3h 33m
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Blodgett DFG100 DBL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck 55000 BTU each CSA NSF
Blodgett DFG100 DBL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck 55000 BTU each CSA NSF
$13,472.50
Time Remaining: 4d 3h 33m
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Blodgett Zephaire E DBL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck 120000 BTU ETL CE NSF
Blodgett Zephaire E DBL Convection Oven Gas Double Deck 120000 BTU ETL CE NSF
$11,147.50
Time Remaining: 4d 3h 33m
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BLODGETT GAS DOUBLE CONVECTION OVEN ZEPHAIRE G DBL
BLODGETT GAS DOUBLE CONVECTION OVEN ZEPHAIRE G DBL
$8,875.00
Time Remaining: 2d 21h 24m
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Blodgett 48 Double Deck Gas or Propane Oven 1048Double
Blodgett 48 Double Deck Gas or Propane Oven 1048Double
$16,315.00
Time Remaining: 2d 21h 24m
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BLODGETT GAS HALF SIZE DOUBLE CONVECTION OVEN DFG 50
BLODGETT GAS HALF SIZE DOUBLE CONVECTION OVEN DFG 50
$9,810.00
Time Remaining: 2d 21h 24m
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Blodgett 981 Gas Baking Deck Oven Double Deck
Blodgett 981 Gas Baking Deck Oven Double Deck
$4,850.00
Time Remaining: 4d 23h 7m
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981 951 BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK ROASTING AND BAKING OVEN 11611 14176 Commercial
981 951 BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK ROASTING AND BAKING OVEN 11611 14176 Commercial
$6,500.00
Time Remaining: 27d 21h 41m
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Blodgett Double Door Gas Oven Brand New
Blodgett Double Door Gas Oven Brand New
$3,900.00
Time Remaining: 7d 23h 7m
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981 BLODGETT DOUBLE STACK PIZZA OVENS commercial pizzeria restaurant kitchen
981 BLODGETT DOUBLE STACK PIZZA OVENS commercial pizzeria restaurant kitchen
$4,200.00
Time Remaining: 15d 22h 47m
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981 BLODGETT DOUBLE STACK PIZZA OVENS commercial pizzeria restaurant kitchen
981 BLODGETT DOUBLE STACK PIZZA OVENS commercial pizzeria restaurant kitchen
$4,850.00
Time Remaining: 17d 3m
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981 BLODGETT COMMERCIAL DOUBLE DECK ROASTING  BAKING PIZZA OVENS for pizzeria
981 BLODGETT COMMERCIAL DOUBLE DECK ROASTING BAKING PIZZA OVENS for pizzeria
$5,500.00
Time Remaining: 19d 1h 37m
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961 BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK PIZZA OVEN 10289 10290 chef
961 BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK PIZZA OVEN 10289 10290 chef
$5,250.00
Time Remaining: 8d 1h 51m
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952 BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK PIZZA OVEN 10299 10300 chef commercial pizzeria
952 BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK PIZZA OVEN 10299 10300 chef commercial pizzeria
$5,100.00
Time Remaining: 3d 20h 45m
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BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK ELECTRIC CONVEYOR OVEN 11018 chef
BLODGETT DOUBLE DECK ELECTRIC CONVEYOR OVEN 11018 chef
$15,000.00
Time Remaining: 1d 1h 4m
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Blodgett Double
Blodgett Double

Surface tension

Cause

Diagram of the forces on two molecules of liquid.

This paper clip which was under the water level, has risen gently and smoothly. Surface tension prevents the paper clip from submerging and from overflowing the blue glass.

Surface tension is caused by the attraction between the liquid's molecules by various intermolecular forces. In the bulk of the liquid, each molecule is pulled equally in every direction by neighbouring liquid molecules, resulting in a net force of zero. At the surface of the liquid, the molecules are pulled inwards by other molecules deeper inside the liquid and are not attracted as intensely by the molecules in the neighbouring medium (be it vacuum, air or another liquid). Therefore, all of the molecules at the surface are subject to an inward force of molecular attraction which is balanced only by the liquid's resistance to compression, meaning there is no net inward force. However, there is a driving force to diminish the surface area. Therefore, the surface area of the liquid shrinks until it has the lowest surface area possible. That explains the spherical shapes of water droplets.

Another way to view it is that a molecule in contact with a neighbour is in a lower state of energy than if it weren't in contact with a neighbour. The interior molecules all have as many neighbours as they can possibly have. But the boundary molecules have fewer neighbours than interior molecules and are therefore in a higher state of energy. For the liquid to minimize its energy state, it must minimize its number of boundary molecules and must therefore minimize its surface area.

As a result of surface area minimization, a surface will assume the smoothest shape it can (mathematical proof that "smooth" shapes minimize surface area relies on use of the Euleragrange equation). Since any curvature in the surface shape results in greater area, a higher energy will also result. Consequently the surface will push back against any curvature in much the same way as a ball pushed uphill will push back to minimize its gravitational potential energy.

Effects in everyday life

Water beading on a leaf

Water dripping from a tap

The effects of surface tension can be seen with ordinary water:

Beading of rain water on the surface of a waxed automobile. Water adheres weakly to wax and strongly to itself, so water clusters into drops. Surface tension gives them their near-spherical shape, because a sphere has the smallest possible surface area to volume ratio

Formation of drops occurs when a mass of liquid is stretched. The animation shows water adhering to the faucet gaining mass until it is stretched to a point where the surface tension can no longer bind it to the faucet. It then separates and surface tension forms the drop into a sphere. If a stream of water were running from the faucet, the stream would break up into drops during its fall. Gravity stretches the stream, then surface tension pinches it into spheres.

Flotation of objects denser than water occurs when the object is nonwettable and its weight is small enough to be borne by the forces arising from surface tension.

Separation of oil and water is caused by a tension in the surface between dissimilar liquids. This type of surface tension is called "interface tension", but its physics are the same.

Tears of wine is the formation of drops and rivulets on the side of a glass containing an alcoholic beverage. Its cause is a complex interaction between the differing surface tensions of water and ethanol.

Surface tension is visible in other common phenomena, especially when certain substances, surfactants, are used to decrease it:

Soap bubbles have very large surface areas with very little bulk. Bubbles in pure water are unstable. The addition of surfactants, however, can have a stabilizing effect on the bubbles (see Marangoni effect). Notice that surfactants actually reduce the surface tension of water by a factor of three or more.

Emulsions are a type of solution in which surface tension plays a role. Tiny fragments of oil suspended in pure water will spontaneously assemble themselves into much larger masses. But the presence of a surfactant provides a decrease in surface tension, which permits stability of minute droplets of oil in the bulk of water (or vice versa).

Basic physics

Two definitions

Diagram shows, in cross-section, a needle floating on the surface of water. Its weight, Fw, depresses the surface, and is balanced by the surface tension forces on either side, Fs, which are each parallel to the water's surface at the points where it contacts the needle. Notice that the horizontal components of the two Fs arrows point in opposite directions, so they cancel each other, but the vertical components point in the same direction and therefore add up to balance Fw.

Surface tension, represented by the symbol is defined as the force along a line of unit length, where the force is parallel to the surface but perpendicular to the line. One way to picture this is to imagine a flat soap film bounded on one side by a taut thread of length, L. The thread will be pulled toward the interior of the film by a force equal to 2L (the factor of 2 is because the soap film has two sides, hence two surfaces). Surface tension is therefore measured in forces per unit length. Its SI unit is newton per metre but the cgs unit of dyne per cm is also used. One dyn/cm corresponds to 0.001 N/m.

An equivalent definition, one that is useful in thermodynamics, is work done per unit area. As such, in order to increase the surface area of a mass of liquid by an amount, A, a quantity of work, A, is needed. This work is stored as potential energy. Consequently surface tension can be also measured in SI system as joules per square metre and in the cgs system as ergs per cm2. Since mechanical systems try to find a state of minimum potential energy, a free droplet of liquid naturally assumes a spherical shape, which has the minimum surface area for a given volume.

The equivalence of measurement of energy per unit area to force per unit length can be proven by dimensional analysis.

Water striders

Water striders, a common neuston that skims on surface tension

Water striders use surface tension to walk on the surface of a pondydrophobic setae on the tarsi keep the insect afloat while an apical hydrophilic claw penetrates the surface, allowing it to "grip" the water. The surface of the water behaves like an elastic film: the insect's feet cause indentations in the water's surface, increasing its surface area. This represents an increase in potential energy through the surface tension of the water equal to the loss of potential energy of the insect's lowered center of mass.

Surface curvature and pressure

Surface tension forces acting on a tiny (differential) patch of surface. x and y indicate the amount of bend over the dimensions of the patch. Balancing the tension forces with pressure leads to the Youngaplace equation

If no force acts normal to a tensioned surface, the surface must remain flat. But if the pressure on one side of the surface differs from pressure on the other side, the pressure difference times surface area results in a normal force. In order for the surface tension forces to cancel the force due to pressure, the surface must be curved. The diagram shows how surface curvature of a tiny patch of surface leads to a net component of surface tension forces acting normal to the center of the patch. When all the forces are balanced, the resulting equation is known as the Youngaplace equation:

where:

p is the pressure difference.

is surface tension.

Rx and Ry are radii of curvature in each of the axes that are parallel to the surface.

The quantity in parentheses on the right hand side is in fact (twice) the mean curvature of the surface (depending on normalisation).

Solutions to this equation determine the shape of water drops, puddles, menisci, soap bubbles, and all other shapes determined by surface tension (such as the shape of the impressions that a water strider's feet make on the surface of a pond).

The table below shows how the internal pressure of a water droplet increases with decreasing radius. For not very small drops the effect is subtle, but the pressure difference becomes enormous when the drop sizes approach the molecular size. (Of course, in the limit of a single molecule the concept becomes meaningless.)

p for water drops of different radii at STP

Droplet radius

1 mm

0.1 mm

1 m

10 nm

p (atm)

0.0014

0.0144

1.436

143.6

Liquid surface as a computer

Minimal surface

To find the shape of the minimal surface bounded by some arbitrary shaped frame using strictly mathematical means can be a daunting task. Yet by fashioning the frame out of wire and dipping it in soap-solution, an approximately minimal surface will appear in the resulting soap-film within seconds. Without a single calculation, the soap-film arrives at a solution to a complex minimization equation on its own.

The reason for this is that the pressure difference across a fluid interface is proportional to the mean curvature, as seen in the Young-Laplace equation. For an open soap film, the pressure difference is zero, hence the mean curvature is zero, and minimal surfaces have the property of zero mean curvature.

Contact angles

Since no liquid can exist in a perfect vacuum for very long, the surface of any liquid is an interface between that liquid and some other medium. The top surface of a pond, for example, is an interface between the pond water and the air. Surface tension, then, is not a property of the liquid alone, but a property of the liquid's interface with another medium. If a liquid is in a container, then besides the liquid/air interface at its top surface, there is also an interface between the liquid and the walls of the container. The surface tension between the liquid and air is usually different (greater than) its surface tension with the walls of a container. And where the two surfaces meet, their geometry must be such that all forces balance.

Forces at contact point shown for contact angle greater than 90 (left) and less than 90 (right)

Where the two surfaces meet, they form a contact angle, , which is the angle the tangent to the surface makes with the solid surface. The diagram to the right shows two examples. Tension forces are shown for the liquid-air interface, the liquid-solid interface, and the solid-air interface. The example on the left is where the difference between the liquid-solid and solid-air surface tension, , is less than the liquid-air surface tension, , but is nevertheless positive, that is

In the diagram, both the vertical and horizontal forces must cancel exactly at the contact point. The horizontal component of is canceled by the adhesive force, .

The more telling balance of forces, though, is in the vertical direction. The vertical component of must exactly cancel the force, .

Liquid

Solid

Contact angle

water

soda-lime glass

lead glass

fused quartz

0

ethanol

diethyl ether

carbon tetrachloride

glycerol

acetic acid

water

paraffin wax

107

silver

90

methyl iodide

soda-lime glass

29

lead glass

30

fused quartz

33

mercury

soda-lime glass

140

Some liquid-solid contact angles

Since the forces are in direct proportion to their respective surface tensions, we also have:

where

is the liquid-solid surface tension,

is the liquid-air surface tension,

is the solid-air surface tension,

is the contact angle, where a concave meniscus has contact angle less than 90 and a convex meniscus has contact angle of greater than 90.

This means that although the difference between the liquid-solid and solid-air surface tension, , is difficult to measure directly, it can be inferred from the easily measured contact angle, , if the liquid-air surface tension, , is known.

This same relationship exists in the diagram on the right. But in this case we see that because the contact angle is less than 90, the liquid-solid/solid-air surface tension difference must be negative:

Special contact angles

Observe that in the special case of a water-silver interface where the contact angle is equal to 90, the liquid-solid/solid-air surface tension difference is exactly zero.

Another special case is where the contact angle is exactly 180. Water with specially prepared Teflon approaches this. Contact angle of 180 occurs when the liquid-solid surface tension is exactly equal to the liquid-air surface tension.

Methods of measurement

Surface tension can be measured using the pendant drop method on a goniometer.

Because surface tension manifests itself in various effects, it offers a number of paths to its measurement. Which method is optimal depends upon the nature of the liquid being measured, the conditions under which its tension is to be measured, and the stability of its surface when it is deformed.

Du Noy Ring method: The traditional method used to measure surface or interfacial tension. Wetting properties of the surface or interface have little influence on this measuring technique. Maximum pull exerted on the ring by the surface is measured.

A minimized version of Du Noy method uses a small diameter metal needle instead of a ring, in combination with a high sensitivity microbalance to record maximum pull. The advantage of this method is that very small sample volumes (down to few tens of microliters) can be measured with very high precision, without the need to correct for buoyancy (for a needle or rather, rod, with proper geometry). Further, the measurement can be performed very quickly, minimally in about 20 seconds. First commercial multichannel tensiometers [CMCeeker] were recently built based on this principle.

Wilhelmy plate method: A universal method especially suited to check surface tension over long time intervals. A vertical plate of known perimeter is attached to a balance, and the force due to wetting is measured.

Spinning drop method: This technique is ideal for measuring low interfacial tensions. The diameter of a drop within a heavy phase is measured while both are rotated.

Pendant drop method: Surface and interfacial tension can be measured by this technique, even at elevated temperatures and pressures. Geometry of a drop is analyzed optically. For details, see Drop.

Bubble pressure method (Jaeger's method): A measurement technique for determining surface tension at short surface ages. Maximum pressure of each bubble is measured.

Drop volume method: A method for determining interfacial tension as a function of interface age. Liquid of one density is pumped into a second liquid of a different density and time between drops produced is measured.

Capillary rise method: The end of a capillary is immersed into the solution. The height at which the solution reaches inside the capillary is related to the surface tension by the equation discussed below.

Stalagmometric method: A method of weighting and reading a drop of liquid.

Sessile drop method: A method for determining surface tension and density by placing a drop on a substrate and measuring the contact angle (see Sessile drop technique).

Test ink method: A method for measuring surface tension of substrats using test ink and interpreting the ink reaction. see video VIDEO to show Surface tension measurement

Effects

Liquid in a vertical tube

Main article: Capillary action

Diagram of a Mercury Barometer

An old style mercury barometer consists of a vertical glass tube about 1 cm in diameter partially filled with mercury, and with a vacuum (called Toricelli's vacuum) in the unfilled volume (see diagram to the right). Notice that the mercury level at the center of the tube is higher than at the edges, making the upper surface of the mercury dome-shaped. The center of mass of the entire column of mercury would be slightly lower if the top surface of the mercury were flat over the entire crossection of the tube. But the dome-shaped top gives slightly less surface area to the entire mass of mercury. Again the two effects combine to minimize the total potential energy. Such a surface shape is known as a convex meniscus.

The reason we consider the surface area of the entire mass of mercury, including the part of the surface that is in contact with the glass, is because mercury does not adhere at all to glass. So the surface tension of the mercury acts over its entire surface area, including where it is in contact with the glass. If instead of glass, the tube were made out of copper, the situation would be very different. Mercury aggressively adheres to copper. So in a copper tube, the level of mercury at the center of the tube will be lower rather than higher than at the edges (that is, it would be a concave meniscus). In a situation where the liquid adheres to the walls of its container, we consider the part of the fluid's surface area that is in contact with the container to have negative surface tension. The fluid then works to maximize the contact surface area. So in this case increasing the area in contact with the container decreases rather than increases the potential energy. That decrease is enough to compensate for the increased potential energy associated with lifting the fluid near the walls of the container.

Illustration of capillary rise and fall. Red=contact angle less than 90; blue=contact angle greater than 90

If a tube is sufficiently narrow and the liquid adhesion to its walls is sufficiently strong, surface tension can draw liquid up the tube in a phenomenon known as capillary action. The height the column is lifted to is given by:

where

is the height the liquid is lifted,

is the liquid-air surface tension,

is the density of the liquid,

is the radius of the capillary,

is the acceleration due to gravity,

is the angle of contact described above. Note that if is greater than 90, as with mercury in a glass container, the liquid will be depressed rather than lifted.

Puddles on a surface

Profile curve of the edge of a puddle where the contact angle is 180. The curve is given by the formula : where

Small puddles of water on a smooth clean surface have perceptible thickness.

Pouring mercury onto a horizontal flat sheet of glass results in a puddle that has a perceptible thickness. (Do not try this except under a fume hood. Mercury vapor is a toxic hazard.) The puddle will spread out only to the point where it is a little under half a centimeter thick, and no thinner. Again this is due to the action of mercury's strong surface tension. The liquid mass flattens out because that brings as much of the mercury to as low a level as possible. But the surface tension, at the same time, is acting to reduce the total surface area. The result is the compromise of a puddle of a nearly fixed thickness.

The same surface tension demonstration can be done with water, but only on a surface made of a substance that the water does not adhere to. Wax is such a substance. Water poured onto a smooth, flat, horizontal wax surface, say a waxed sheet of glass, will behave similarly to the mercury poured onto glass.

The thickness of a puddle of liquid on a surface whose contact angle is 180 is given by:

where

is the depth of the puddle in centimeters or meters.

is the surface tension of the liquid in dynes per centimeter or newtons per meter.

is the acceleration due to gravity and is equal to 980 cm/s2 or 9.8 m/s2

is the density of the liquid in grams per cubic centimeter or kilograms per cubic meter

Illustration of how lower contact angle leads to reduction of puddle depth

In reality, the thicknesses of the puddles will be slightly less than what is predicted by the above formula because very few surfaces have a contact angle of 180 with any liquid. When the contact angle is less than 180, the thickness is given by:

For mercury on glass, , , and , which gives . For water on paraffin at 25 C, , , and which gives .

The formula also predicts that when the contact angle is 0, the liquid will spread out into a micro-thin layer over the surface. Such a surface is said to be fully wettable by the liquid.

The break up of streams into drops

Intermediate stage of a jet breaking into drops. Radii of curvature in the axial direction are shown. Equation for the radius of the stream is , where is the radius of the unperturbed stream, is the amplitude of the perturbation, is distance along the axis of the stream, and is the wave number

Main article: Plateauayleigh instability

In day to day life we all observe that a stream of water emerging from a faucet will break up into droplets, no matter how smoothly the stream is emitted from the faucet. This is due to a phenomenon called the Plateauayleigh instability, which is entirely a consequence of the effects of surface tension.

The explanation of this instability begins with the existence of tiny perturbations in the stream. These are always present, no matter how smooth the stream is. If the perturbations are resolved into sinusoidal components, we find that some components grow with time while others decay with time. Among those that grow with time, some grow at faster rates than others. Whether a component decays or grows, and how fast it grows is entirely a function of its wave number (a measure of how many peaks and troughs per centimeter) and the radius of the original cylindrical stream.

Thermodynamics

As stated above, the mechanical work needed to increase a surface is . Hence at constant temperature and pressure, surface tension equals Gibbs free energy per surface area:

where is Gibbs free energy and is the area.

Thermodynamics requires that all spontaneous changes of state are accompanied by a decrease in Gibbs free energy.

From this it is easy to understand why decreasing the surface area of a mass of liquid is always spontaneous (), provided it is not coupled to any other energy changes. It follows that in order to increase surface area, a certain amount of energy must be added.

Gibbs free energy is defined by the equation, , where is enthalpy and is entropy. Based upon this and the fact that surface tension is Gibbs free energy per unit area, it is possible to obtain the following expression for entropy per unit area:

Kelvin's Equation for surfaces arises by rearranging the previous equations. It states that surface enthalpy or surface energy (different from surface free energy) depends both on surface tension and its derivative with temperature at constant pressure by the relationship.

Thermodynamics of soap bubble

The pressure inside an ideal (one surface) soap bubble can be derived from thermodynamic free energy considerations. At constant temperature and particle number, dT = dN = 0, the differential Helmholtz free energy is given by

where P is the difference in pressure inside and outside of the bubble, and is the surface tension. In equilbrium, dF = 0, and so,

.

For a spherical bubble, the volume and surface area are given simply by

,

and

.

Substituting these relations into the previous expression, we find

,

which is equivalent to the Young-Laplace equation when Rx = Ry. For real soap bubbles, the pressure is doubled due to the presence of two interfaces, one inside and one outside.

Influence of temperature

Temperature dependence of the surface tension of pure water

Temperature dependency of the surface tension of benzene

Surface tension is dependent on temperature. For that reason, when a value is given for the surface tension of an interface, temperature must be explicitly stated. The general trend is that surface tension decreases with the increase of temperature, reaching a value of 0 at the critical temperature. For further details see Etvs rule. There are only empirical equations to relate surface tension and temperature:

Etvs:

Here V is the molar volume of that substance, TC is the critical temperature and k is a constant valid for almost all substances. A typical value is k = 2.1 x 107 [J K1 mol-2/3] . For water one can further use V = 18 ml/mol and TC = 374 C.

A variant on Etvs is described by Ramay and Shields:

where the temperature offset of 6 kelvins provides the formula with a better fit to reality at lower temperatures.

Guggenheim-Katayama:

is a constant for each liquid and n is an empirical factor, whose value is 11/9 for organic liquids. This equation was also proposed by van der Waals, who further proposed that could be given by the expression, , where is a universal constant for all liquids, and is the critical pressure of the liquid (although later experiments found to vary to some degree from one liquid to another).

Both Guggenheim-Katayama and Etvs take into account the fact that surface tension reaches 0 at the critical temperature, whereas Ramay and Shields fails to match reality at this endpoint.

Influence of solute concentration

Solutes can have different effects on surface tension depending on their structure:

Little or no effect, for example sugar

Increase surface tension, inorganic salts

Decrease surface tension progressively, alcohols

Decrease surface tension and, once a minimum is reached, no more effect: surfactants

What complicates the effect is that a solute can exist in a different concentration at the surface of a solvent than in its bulk. This difference varies from one solute/solvent combination to another.

Gibbs isotherm states that:     

is known as surface concentration, it represents excess of solute per unit area of the surface over what would be present if the bulk concentration prevailed all the way to the surface. It has units of mol/m2

is the concentration of the substance in the bulk solution.

is the gas constant and the temperature

Certain assumptions are taken in its deduction, therefore Gibbs isotherm can only be applied to ideal (very dilute) solutions with two components.

Influence of particle size on vapour pressure

See also: Gibbs-Thomson effect

The Clausius-Clapeyron relation leads to another equation also attributed to Kelvin. It explains why, because of surface tension, the vapor pressure for small droplets of liquid in suspension is greater than standard vapor pressure of that same liquid when the interface is flat. That is to say that when a liquid is forming small droplets, the equilibrium concentration of its vapor in its surroundings is greater. This arises because the pressure inside the droplet is greater than outside.

Molecules on the surface of a tiny droplet (left) have, on average, fewer neighbors than those on a flat surface (right). Hence they are bound more weakly to the droplet than are flat-surface molecules.

is the standard vapor pressure for that liquid at that temperature and pressure.

is the molar volume.

is the gas constant

rk is the Kelvin radius, the radius of the droplets.

The effect explains supersaturation of vapors. In the absence of nucleation sites, tiny droplets must form before they can evolve into larger droplets. This requires a vapor pressure many times the vapor pressure at the phase transition point.

This equation is also used in catalyst chemistry to assess mesoporosity for solids.

The effect can be viewed in terms of the average number of molecular neighbors of surface molecules (see diagram).

The table shows some calculated values of this effect for water at different drop sizes:

P/P0 for water drops of different radii at STP

Droplet radius (nm)

1000

100

10

1

P/P0

1.001

1.011

1.114

2.95

The effect becomes clear for very small drop sizes, as a drop of 1 nm radius has about 100 molecules inside, which is a quantity small enough to require a quantum mechanics analysis.

Data table

Surface tension of various liquids in dyn/cm against air

Mixture %'s are by weight

dyne/cm is also called mN/m (milli-Newton per meter) in S.I. units

Liquid

Temperature C

Surface tension,

Acetic acid

20

27.6

Acetic acid (40.1%) + Water

30

40.68

Acetic acid (10.0%) + Water

30

54.56

Acetone

20

23.7

Diethyl ether

20

17.0

Ethanol

20

22.27

Ethanol (40%) + Water

25

29.63

Ethanol (11.1%) + Water

25

46.03

Glycerol

20

63

n-Hexane

20

18.4

Hydrochloric acid 17.7M aqueous solution

20

65.95

Isopropanol

20

21.7

Mercury

15

487

Methanol

20

22.6

n-Octane

20

21.8

Sodium chloride 6.0M aqueous solution

20

82.55

Sucrose (55%) + water

20

76.45

Water

0

75.64

Water

25

71.97

Water

50

67.91

Water

100

58.85

See also

Anti-fog

Capillary wave short waves on a water surface, governed by surface tension and inertia

Cheerio effect the tendency for small wettable floating objects to attract one another.

Cohesion

Dimensionless numbers

Bond number

Capillary number

Marangoni number

Weber number

Dortmund Data Bank contains experimental temperature-dependent surface tensions.

Electrodipping force

Electrowetting

Etvs rule a rule for predicting surface tension dependent on temperature.

Fluid pipe

Hydrostatic Equilibrium the effect of gravity pulling matter into a round shape.

Meniscus surface curvature formed by a liquid in a container.

Mercury beating heart a consequence of inhomogeneous surface tension.

Microfluidics

Sessile drop technique

Specific surface energy same as surface tension in isotropic materials.

Spinning Drop Method

Stalagmometric method

Surface tension values

Surfactants substances which reduce surface tension.

Tears of wine the surface tension induced phenomenon seen on the sides of glasses containing alcoholic beverages.

Tolman length leading term in correcting the surface tension for curved surfaces.

Wetting and dewetting

Gallery of effects

Breakup of a moving sheet of water bouncing off of a spoon.

Photo of flowing water adhering to a hand. Surface tension creates the sheet of water between the flow and the hand.

A soap bubble balances surface tension forces against internal pneumatic pressure.

Surface tension prevents a coin from sinking: the coin is indisputably denser than water, so it cannot be floating due to buoyancy alone.

A daisy. The entirety of the flower lies below the level of the (undisturbed) free surface. The water rises smoothly around its edge. Surface tension prevents water filling the air between the petals and possibly submerging the flower.

Photo showing the "tears of wine" phenomenon, which is induced by a combination of surface tension modification of water by ethanol together with ethanol evaporating faster than water.

A metal paper clip floats on water. Several can usually be carefully added without overflow of water.

An aluminum coin floats on the surface of the water at 10C. Any extra weight would drop the coin to the bottom.

References

^ a b c d e f g h i j Pierre-Gilles de Gennes; Franoise Brochard-Wyart; David Qur (2002). Capillary and Wetting Phenomena Drops, Bubbles, Pearls, Waves. Springer. ISBN 0-387-00592-7. 

^ a b c White, Harvey E. (1948). Modern College Physics. van Nostrand. ISBN 0442294018. 

^ John W. M. Bush (May 2004). "MIT Lecture Notes on Surface Tension, lecture 5" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. http://web.mit.edu/1.63/www/Lec-notes/Surfacetension/Lecture5.pdf. Retrieved April 1 2007. 

^ a b c d e f g h i j Sears, Francis Weston; Zemanski, Mark W. University Physics 2nd ed. Addison Wesley 1955

^ John W. M. Bush (April 2004). "MIT Lecture Notes on Surface Tension, lecture 1" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. http://web.mit.edu/1.63/www/Lec-notes/Surfacetension/Lecture1.pdf. Retrieved April 1 2007. 

^ John W. M. Bush (May 2004). "MIT Lecture Notes on Surface Tension, lecture 3" (PDF). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. http://web.mit.edu/1.63/www/Lec-notes/Surfacetension/Lecture3.pdf. Retrieved April 1 2007. 

^ Aaronson, Scott. "NP-Complete Problems and physical reality.". SIGACT News. http://www.scottaaronson.com/papers/npcomplete.pdf. 

^ a b c d "Surface Tension by the Ring Method (Du Nouy Method)" (pdf). PHYWE. http://www.nikhef.nl/~h73/kn1c/praktikum/phywe/LEP/Experim/1_4_05.pdf. Retrieved 2007-09-08. 

^ a b "Surface and Interfacial Tension". Langmuir-Blodgett Instruments. http://www.ksvinc.com/surface_tension1.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-08. 

^ "Surfacants at interfaces" (PDF). lauda.de. http://lauda.de/hosting/lauda/webres.nsf/urlnames/graphics_tvt2/$file/Tensio-dyn-meth-e.pdf. Retrieved 2007-09-08. 

^ Calvert, James B.. "Surface Tension (physics lecture notes)". University of Denver. http://mysite.du.edu/~jcalvert/phys/surftens.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-08. 

^ "Sessile Drop Method". Dataphysics. http://www.dataphysics.de/english/messmeth_sessil.htm. Retrieved 2007-09-08. 

^ a b c d e Moore, Walter J. (1962). Physical Chemistry, 3rd ed.. Prentice Hall. 

^ a b c d e Adam, Neil Kensington (1941). The Physics and Chemistry of Surfaces, 3rd ed.. Oxford University Press. 

^ a b "Physical Properties Sources Index: Etvs Constant". http://www.ppsi.ethz.ch/fmi/xsl/eqi/eqi_property_details_en.xsl?node_id=1113. Retrieved 2008-11-16. 

^ G. Ertl, H. Knzinger and J. Weitkamp; Handbook of heterogeneous catalysis, Vol. 2, page 430; Wiley-VCH; Weinheim; 1997

^ Lange's Handbook of Chemistry, 10th ed. pp 16611665

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Surface tension

Concise overview of surface tension

On surface tension and interesting real-world cases

MIT Lecture Notes on Surface Tension

Theory of surface tension measurements

Surface Tensions of Various Liquids

Calculation of temperature-dependent surface tensions for some common components

The Bubble Wall (Audio slideshow from the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory explaining cohesion, surface tension and hydrogen bonds)

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