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  • Sometimes after a hard day at work I grab a foamy beer and think.

  • Why dis all foamy?

  • C'mon scientists.

  • Luckily, Stanford is on the case!

  • Hey there everyone, Trace here for DNews.

  • Researchers at Stanford University have been playing with bubbles, which is a sentence

  • I can't believe I get to say.

  • They've found a way to stop the colorful swirling patterns you see on the surface of

  • a bubble -- they're called eddies.

  • The colors in those eddies actually correspond to the thickness at that point in the bubble,

  • and they swirl because of something called the Marangoni Effect -- which is when molecules

  • that aren't that attracted to each other in one part of the bubble rush off to areas

  • where they're more wanted.

  • It has to do with the tendency of fluids to move to areas of higher surface tension.

  • You probably remember surface tension from middle school science; it's why water can

  • fill just a LITTLE above the top of the glass.

  • Under the surface water molecules are attracted to all the other water molecules around them,

  • but the ones on the surface have nothing above them so they cohere (or stick) to their neighbors

  • more strongly.

  • This creates the phenomenon of surface tension.

  • Incidentally, they don't do it as well when they're hot, which is why hot water is better

  • for washing: the water spreads around easier and you literally get wetter.

  • But that's neither here nor there.

  • If you really want to mess up the balance you can throw some soap into it.

  • Soap molecules are kind of shaped like match sticks, they have a head that is all about

  • water and a tail that takes to water like a cat.

  • If you plop a drop of soap into the middle of these tense molecules, chaos breaks out.

  • The soap molecule totally wrecks that surface tension.

  • Molecules that do this are called surfactants.

  • When a surfactant breaks the surface tension in one area, they've created a surface tension

  • gradient.

  • Essentially, water in the low tension area is pulled on by water in the high tension

  • areas.

  • This is called the Marangoni effect.

  • And again, is why the colors swirl around bubbles.

  • The most visible experiment demonstrating the Marangoni effect that you can do at home

  • involves milk, food coloring, and a drop of soap.

  • Place a couple drops of the food coloring of your choice in the middle of a bowl of

  • milk.

  • Plop one drop of soap in and then WOOSH!

  • Marangoni effect.

  • Again, what's happening is when the water repelling tail of that soapy surfactant finds

  • the surface, it prevents the water molecules from grouping, and sticks its tail in the

  • air instead.

  • Without a mass of water molecules at the surface, we get less surface tension.

  • And these experiments are just for kids either, the Marangoni effect can have

  • real world applications

  • Or so the Stanford scientists tell us.

  • When they messed with the Marangoni effect, they found they could stabilize these colorful

  • eddies on the bubble's surface.

  • They created a bubble under the water and raised it slowly through the surface

  • tension to manage the amount of Marangoni effect.

  • Once everything stabilized, they could raise it a little more, and then a little more!

  • When one colorful eddy would run into another, they would create a boundary and lock into

  • place.

  • No more swirling colors!

  • But more importantly, they've created a more stable bubble!

  • And this research does have a practical purpose!

  • The scientists studying this are experimenting with ways to separate crude oil from water,

  • or how to rid drug formulations of unwanted bubbles.

  • Most importantly of all, they're studying how the structure of bubbles affects the quality

  • of beer foam.

  • Listen scientists if you could make a cold one that doesn't foam over when I set my

  • bottle down a little too fast, you can play with all the bubbles you like.

  • Speaking of cold ones, here at DNews, we've learned that it's hard to make videos every

  • day of the week, let alone doing it for 10 years!

  • That's why we want to raise a cold one to congratulate Philip DeFranco on his 10 year

  • YouTube anniversary!

  • If you haven't already, head on over to his channel and send him some love!

  • The guy really deserves it! 10 YEARS!

  • So if hot water makes your hands wetter, do you still need to use soap?

  • Yeah, totally.

  • I explain why in this video here.

  • Did you do any other science experiments as a kid that you wanna know the

  • super complex explanation of? Let us know in the comments and

  • make sure you keep coming back for more DNews!

Sometimes after a hard day at work I grab a foamy beer and think.

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肥皂泡為什麼會有彩虹漩渦? (Why Do Soap Bubbles Have Rainbow Swirls?)

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    謝純全 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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