Historical Articles
November, 1954 issue of Plating
THE TECHNOLOGY OF LIQUID BUFFING COMPOSITIONS*
Robert V. Twyning, Twyning Chemical Specialties Company, Belvidere, Illinois.
*Presented at the Forty-First Annual Convention of the American Electroplaters’ Society, July 14, 1954
The technology of liquid buffing compositions is a study in colloids,
which subject has entertained the minds of some of the greatest physicists
and chemists such as Kruyt, Helmholtz, Einstein, Debye, Langmuir, Freundlich,
Zsigmondy, and Guoy over the past eighty years. It is advisable in
the study of colloids that we revert to the academics of this branch
of chemistry and differentiate between the two types of particles,
suspensoids and emulsoids. Both emulsoids and suspensoids are sols-and
differ from each other tremendously in their physical behavior. The
viscosity of a suspensoid solution varies only slightly from water
itself, i.e., 5 per cent, while the viscosity of an emulsoid varies
tremendously, so much so that the addition of as little as 1/2 per
cent of natural or synthetic gums will raise the viscosity sufficiently
to become immeasurable. The addition of minute amounts of electrolytes
to a suspensoid causes precipitation, while emulsoids are affected
only slightly but will coalesce upon the addition of sufficient quantity
of electrolyte, especially that containing the di- or trivalent cations.
Suspensoids which have precipitated are in many cases not redispersable
and in other cases only with great difficulty, while emulsoids which
have coalesced can be regenerated easily. The stability of a suspensoid
is dependent strictly on its electric charge (i.e., silica and gold
sols being negative) and having lost its given charge precipitation
occurs, while emulsoids have either a positive or negative electric
charge and in some cases none at all (positive charge in acid solutions,
negative charge in alkaline solutions). The effect which causes emulsoids
to be inherently stable becomes evident when we consider that starches
and gums undergo swelling in the presence of water. Hydration of such
materials is a natural function, and the forces involved by their nature
tend to keep the particles from coalescing. -Suspensoids are continuously
in vigorous motion while emulsoids show no sign of motion when sighted
through an ultra microscope.
The
Greek terms used to denote the physical actions of the elements
within a molecule having properties bearing on emulsification are
hydrophobic (meaning water hating), hydrophilic (water loving),
liophobic and lypophobic (solvent hating), and liophilic and lypophilic
(solvent loving). When the term liophobic colloid is used, reference
is made to a suspensoidal particle wherein water is the dispersing
medium but the suspended particles such as metals and/or their
oxides have little or no affinity toward water. In the original
Greek lyo meant ”to loosen,” and it becomes clear that liophilic when used as a synonym for emulsoid refers to starches and gums which hydrate readily and ”love to loosen” and
become disaggregated. As stated above, the elements within a molecule
which are termed hydrophilic are normally one of the following
polar groups, namely, hydroxyl, amine, carbonyl, mercapto, carboxyl,
and functional groups of condensed ethylene oxide; hydrophobic
elements are the nonpolar paraffinic or olefinic chains, in some
cases containing even condensed propylene oxide within the hydrophobic
element.1
The function of an emulsifier is twofold, namely, to allow for ready preparation of the emulsion and also to control the type that is formed, whether oil-in-water or water-in-oil. The emulsifier reduces the interfacial tension of the two immiscible phases, thereby making the emulsion easy to prepare. Inter-facial tension is the numerical difference between the surface tension of two liquids to he emulsified. Water at 73 dynes per square centimeter and oil at 45 dynes per square centimeter have an inter-facial tension of 28 dynes. The function of the emulsifier is to reduce this 28 dynes to one or two dynes per square centimeter. If inter-facial tension measurements are made after the emulsifier has reduced the value to one or two dynes per square centimeter then it is found that the error introduced by the addition of the third phase (platinum ring) is in such magnitude as to give unreliable results.
All genuine rigorous emulsifiers are micro heterogeneous and are colloidally dispersible. They must be heterogeneous in order not to be highly soluble in either the dispersed or continuous phase. Their elements must be of such composition as to cause the molecule to be partially, but not totally, soluble in each phase. When this requirement is met the molecules are then vigorous and accumulate at the inter-facial boundary of the dispersed phase. Fatty soaps are of this nature and have been our most prominent emulsifiers. It is interesting to note here that charcoal and soot have been used-as emulsifiers just as effectively as fatty soaps; however, it is imperative to add that carbon in its various allotropic forms yields a positively charged suspensoid and that poor stability results if carbon is co-dispersed with finely divided siliceous abrasives which have an inherent negative charge. Advantage can be taken of the existence of this condition when, in the formulation of a solid or bar type buffing composition, it is found necessary to neutralize the extremely high electrostatic charge of the fine ends of tripoli powder (tripoli powder has the greatest dipole moment of all finely divided siliceous materials) which attach themselves electrostatically to the surface of buffed metal after the cleaning operation, whether it be chlorinated solvent or aqueous.
Emulsions are invariably formed in the hot state since the
surface tension of water at 90°C is 61 dynes per square centimeter as against 73 dynes at 20°C; also the viscosity of both oil and water is a linear function of temperature, water losing 70 per cent of its room temperature viscosity at 90°C, i.e., one poise at 20° reducing to 0.31 poise at 90° and animal oil losing 90 per cent of its room temperature viscosity at 100°, i.e., 0.42 poise at 30° reducing to 0.046 poise at 90°.
The above reductions in viscosity-and surface tension account
for the ease with which emulsions are made at elevated temperatures.
Emulsions are either water-in-oil (w/o) or oil-in-water (o/w), depending primarily on the selection of an emulsifier. Fatty soaps containing monovalent cations yield o/w emulsions. Fatty soaps containing bi and trivalent cations yield w/o emulsions. Emulsifiers which are strong in hydrophilic elements (polyoxethylene) yield o/w emulsions and conversely emulsifiers strong in hydrophobic elements (mono and di esters) yield w/o emulsions. Water content is not critical regardless of which type emulsion is desired, namely, o/w or w/o, but if the water content is not within reasonable limits the continuous phase can become discontinuous; in other words, the emulsion may invert from o/w to w/o in emulsions containing a deficient amount of water in the order of 10 to 20 per cent instead of the nominal amount of 50 to 60 per cent. The determination of which phase is continuous is not difficult. The most common method being to determine whether water acts as a diluent; if so, obviously water is the continuous phase. However, some emulsifiers are sufficiently vigorous so that either of the following two methods must be used: (1) the addition of an oil or water soluble dye and (2) the conductance of an electric current showing water to be continuous.
In 1820 Brown, an English botanist, first discovered that matter in a finely divided state when suspended in water was in violent agitation, which has since been termed Brownian movement. In 1879 the great physicist Helmholtz theorized that each particle in Brownian movement must be surrounded by a layer of adjacent anions which were again enveloped by an equal number of cations. The potential across this rigid double layer as hypothesized by Helmholtz was denoted as sigma, S,
which is the transverse potential of the rigid double layer.
In 1910 Guoy and Freundlich theorized that a portion of the
cations as described by Helmholtz must be in the mobile liquid
and ascribed a potential to these mobile cations only as a ”zeta (Z) potential” and
referred to them as a tangentical potential. The character
of the transverse potential curve S, of which the tangentical potential curve Z is part, is dependent on the concentration of the electrolyte and valence of the ions; as these latter two increase, the potential and the double layer thickness decrease until precipitation occurs.
From the foregoing it appears that suspensoids are much more difficult to process than are emulsoids and fortunately protective colloids can be employed which envelope the suspensoids and their double layers, causing the suspensoids to behave exactly as an emulsoid thereby tolerating the electrolytes formed by the hydrolysis of the salts and hydrates present in the abrasives (the combined RO and R203 in Rose tripoli powder averages 4.6 per cent and the white cryptocrystaline silicas 0.25 per cent).
Zsigmondy
determined the relative strength of certain negative protective
colloids and defined his ”Gold Number” as the number of milligrams of dry material of the emulsoid sol (protective colloid) which is just sufficient to prevent the change from red to blue in 10cc of gold sol, after the addition of 1cc of a 10 per cent sodium chloride solution. The reciprocal of the Gold Number is the ”U Number” which
readily conveys the comparative effectiveness of the colloids.
An interesting and significant research project2 employing the turbidimetric method to determine the approximate particle size average in individual emulsions shows very close agreement with the average particle size as determined by means of the electron microscope.3 The
turbidimetric method utilizes a Parr Instrument Type S-3
visual turbidimeter which measures the ”extinction path length” or
depth of the solution through which a light source just fails
to be visible. By means of the electron microscope the authors4 determined the particle size by extrapolating data pertaining to an emulsion of Carnauba wax, borax, and fatty soap (excluding waters for dilution and to make the emulsion), 0.0765 microns for a 10.3 per cent solution of soap and 0.0685 microns for a 11.9 solution of soap. It appears that the minimum, and also the optimum, particle size for a fatty soap emulsion of Carnauba wax lies between 0.06 and 0.075 microns.
Bolton and Marshall, by means of a visual turbidimeter, made the following determination from emulsions of an oxidized paranic wax, oleic acid, and morpholine; the particle size increased with decreasing oleic acid additions over a wide range of morpholine additions, the particle size decreased as the oleic acid increased even though the morpholine additions were at a lesser percentage. From these data it is concluded that the sensitivity of a system to added morpholine is decreased with decreasing oleic acid and that relatively more morpholine is required for emulsification as the oleic acid is decreased, and also that the particle size is decreased greatly as the oleic acid increases and morpholine decreases.
Electron
micro photographs of an emulsion by Schoenholtz and Kimball
show the effect on the dispersed phase of using an excessive,
a deficient, and the optimum amount of an amine emulsifier
to gain minimum particle size. An excessive amount of
amine causes the formation of agglomerates of such a
large, irregular and random shape that one quarter of
the visible field is heavily shadowed. A deficient amount
of amine yields an entirely different type dispersion
which consists partly of the spherical emulsoidal particles
but contains mostly an unusual amount of anisotropic
or crystalline lattices appearing as twisted ribbons
and ;n some cases like finely dispersed fibrils none
of which have similar configurations. The optimum amount
of amine causes a dispersion- which is associated with
the normal concept in that the dispersed particles are,-
in some cases, truly spherical and some slightly elliptical,
some spheres appear to have nodes attached but this may
be due to one sphere partially underlying another and
appearing as an appendage due to the dimensional-aspect
of a photograph. It is significant to relate here that
the normal concept of metathetical reactions as between
oleic acid and an amine do not hold true in dealing with
colloids as is shown above, and which confirm further
the literature,5 which states that simple stoichiometric relations no longer exist between the added substances.
It
is of paramount importance that the components in
the oil phase and the emulsifiers used in making
the emulsions in which- abrasives are suspended,
produce soils which are adapted to the method of
cleaning; for example, soluble fatty soaps are excellent
emulsifiers but are insoluble in organic degreasing
solvents; such soaps are readily removed by aqueous
soak, spray wash, and electro cleaners. Surface active
agents are very excellent emulsifiers, certain of
them are cleanable in every cleaning method used
prior to electro deposition; and are unique in that
certain of them solubilize oils, fats, and waxes
with the- exception of sterols. These highly complex
alicyclic alcohols and their esters are among the
finest wax type lubricants known but also one of
the most difficult to clean when in the form of buffing
soil. Certain of the more common phosphatides are
used as emulsifiers and also assist the more vigorous
emulsifiers, however, they hydrolyze to form quaternary
bases,6 which are cationic and
can cause cleaning difficulty because of the incompatibility
of anionic and cationic surface active agents. The
cleanability of liquid bung composition soil is dependent,
quite naturally on its components but the quantity
of soil is equally important; large amounts of easy
cleaning soil are apt to leave patterns under plate
if the buffed work is excessively loaded with soil.
Such heavy soil removal is not a linear function
of cleaning time and operators should beware of extreme
soil loading. Solid or bar type compositions for
nonferrous metals contain approximately 30 per cent
binoer, while liquid compositions contain approximately
40 per cent binder. This 10 per cent increase, which
is further accentuated by the accompanying 10 per
cent drop in abrasive powder, would-seemingly cause
liquid compositions to transfer more soil to the
buffed work; however, the evaporation of the water
from the buffing head cools the fabric very noticeably
causing the grease face to become firmer and/or the
fabric to become more rigid and therefore wipe the
soiled work to a higher lustre than in the case with
bar compositions; also, the water wets the cotton
fibrils which have a higher tensile strength wet
than dry.7 Cotton is unique among the linear polymers in that it is one of the very few exhibiting this property.
Trichlorethylene degreasing solvent has been replaced by perchlorethylene where more stubborn soils require greater heat and greater solvency for their removal.8 Mr. J. Hensley9 and coworkers have used carbon C-14 tagged stearic acid as a soil applied onto highly polished steel discs finished with No. 220 silicon carbide in order to determine the effect of cleaning time with various singly used alkalis. In the course of their work it was found that 0.8 microgram of stearic acid on steel would wet perfectly and take a satisfactory bright nickel plate. This amount of soil, if assumed to be evenly distributed, and assumed that the surface were perfectly smooth and the effective and macro surfaces were equal, would be four molecular layers thick or 1.0 millimicrons. However, it cannot be stated arbitrarily that a certain quantity of soil will have a specified effect on the wettability of the metal surface or the nature of the electroplate applied over it.
The density of the silicas and the alumina which are suspended in the emulsions are two to five times greater than the emulsion density, and for the suspension to be free of settling obviously the emulsion must be stable and non-creaming (showing no sign of coalesced dispersed phase floating on the surface). The emulsion particle size should be reduced as far as possible (approximately 0.06 micron diameter) to attain this stability and protective colloids such as natural or synthetic gums can be used to raise the viscosity of the continuous phase to prevent settling.
Liquids
are classified with reference to viscosity as
Newtonian, Dilatant, or Thixotropic depending
on whether they maintain viscosity independent
of the speed- of agitation, such as water or
oil (Newtonian); whether they become more viscous
on agitation, such as egg albumin or whipping
cream (Dilatant); or whether they become less
viscous on agitation such as Bentonite clay slurries
and sols of iron oxide and aluminum oxide (Thixotropic).
Liquid buffing compositions fall into this latter
class, the name being derived from the Greek,
thixis, meaning ”touch,” and tropein, meaning ”to change.” ”Plastic Set” and Thixotropy are synonymous terms and refer to the ”livered” or
gelled condition of the liquid suspension. This
pseudo gel is short lived, however, when the
liquid is being pumped or in any way agitated
and will develop again on standing. Because of
the tremendous reduction in viscosity due to
agitation inherent in pumping (a reduction from
12,000 cps to 6,000 cps is not uncommon) it is
well to reduce proportionally the regulated pressure
at the pump after a short period of recycle.
The phenomenon called Thixotropy, which is beneficial
when controlled in liquid buffing- compositions
since it prohibits the abrasive from; settling
on storage, is caused primarily by the solubilized
salts and hydrates present in the abrasives.
Thixotropy increases proportionally to the content
of high melting components present in the dispersed
phase of the emulsion when solvents are excluded;
it also is a direct function of the alumina content
of siliceous abrasives (Rose tripoli powder contains
roughly four times the alumina as does Cream
tripoli, while the more pure silicas contain
half as much alumina as Cream tripoli).
The
rate of metal removal by buffing or ”cut” has been a relative term having no coefficient values except in the laboratory where pre weighed brass discs work against each other in the presence of abrasive and mineral oil. A more significant laboratory testing device has a moving bed under a pressurized buffing head; however, in practice the criterion for cutting power rests with the operators and inspectors. The most satisfactory means for determining ”cut” in the field is intentionally to coarse polish the base metal and follow with three or four passes of the buffing head at uniform pressure and equal elapsed time; the amount of coarse polish showing through the finish has proved quite satisfactory in determining comparative ”cut.” The cutting power of a liquid composition is very considerably dependent on how well the liquid ”faces” the
buffing head; almost invariably a faster
cut is produced by a firm, hard wheel face
for it is self evident that the abrasive
must be firmly held by the wheel in order
to cut. The success of liquid compositions
in industrial application is due mainly to
the attainment of a firm wheel face which
is nearly synonymous with cutting power.
An
ideal emulsion would be one that would
split phase the instant it becomes atomized,
to allow for free evaporation of water
and cause the dispersed phase to coalesce
onto the continuous grease face on the
bung head and also to prevent re-emulsification
once the binder has split from the emulsion.
Fortunately high vapor pressure emulsifiers
are available which evaporate with the
water and prevent re-emuIsification on
the wheel face. The water content of
the emulsion should also therefore be
just in excess of the critical for phase
inversion so that even slight evaporation
causes the dispersed phase to coalesce.
The mono, di, and tri valent metallic
oxides present in siliceous abrasives
unfortunately cause gel formations which
require additional water for dilution.
The more pure hard-buffing abrasives
now being marketed are sufficiently low
in the above metallic oxides so as to
allow the water content of the emulsion
to approach the critical inversion point
and thereby reduce the wheel throw off.
Before concluding it should be stated that the design and performance of the spray equipment has caused both failure and success of many liquid composition formulations; a change of spray gun design in the field has caused mediocre formulations to perform quite satisfactorily.
It is hoped that the information correlated in this discussion serves to enlighten those concerned and thereby add to the progress of metal finishing and electroplating.
REFERENCES
1. L. G. Lundsted, U. S. Patent No. 2,674,619, assigned to Wyandotte Chemical Corp., April 6, 1954.
2. M. E. Bolton and A.
W. Marshall, ”Examination of Wax Suspensions by Turbidimetric Methods,” Soap
and Sanitary Chemicals (Sept., 1949).
3. D. Schoenholtz and C. S. Kimball, Soap and Sanitary Chemicals (Aug., 194?).
4. Ibid.
5. Kruyt and Van Klooster, 2nd ed., p. 5 (1930).
6. J. B. Conant, The Chemistry of Organic Compounds, p. 186
(1933).
7. S. Setterquist, National Lock Company, Rockford, III.
8. C. W. Smith, Whitfield Chemical Co., Detroit, Mich.
9. J. W. Hensley, H. A.
Skinner, H. R. Sutter, ”A Metal Cleaning Test Using Radioactive Steric Acid as Soil,” Special
Technical Publications No. 115, American Society for Testing
Materials (1952).
DISCUSSION
MR. LAVERNE VERZIER (Consultant, Waterbury, Conn.): Have you found too much effect from the impurities in the stainless steel cutting grades or stainless coloring grades on the stability of your emulsions?
MR.
TWYNING: No, if the protective colloids are used to control
viscosity of the continuous phase then the electrolyte
formed by the soluble impurities does not cause precipitation
of the suspensoidal particles since these particles then
assume the same properties as the emulsoidal particles,
but if the protective colloids are not used then the gravity
of the abrasive being so much greater than that of the
emulsion you get settling. However, in some cases we have
had gas evolution from liquid stainless composition which
is hard to explain.
MR. EDWARD HERZIG (Electro Tec Corporation, South Hackensack, N. J.): Can colloids be used to improve finish over regular type polishing compounds? If so, which of the liquid buffing types?
MR. TWYNING: Normally, in finishing nonferrous metals, the finish color of the metal is higher than when bar composition is used; this is so even though the liquid composition may contain 10 per cent more binder than bar type. It is probable that the water from the liquid type keeps the buff face cool and therefore firm.
MR. HERZIG: Are the particles of colloidal size?
MR. TWYNING: Of the abrasive?
MR. HERZIG: Yes.
MR. TWYNING: Oh, yes, they run from one-tenth to three-tenths micron diameter.
MR. HERZIG: So actually you cannot get a better finish.
MR. TWYNING: You can use the same abrasive in liquid composition as in bar and the finish will not be any different.
MR.
HERZIG: What would be the proper type of equipment
you have mentioned—is
it bung wheels or type of wheels?
MR.
TWYNING: No, it is not dependent on the manufacture
of the wheel or type of wheel. Normally, the
bias construction buff is used on automatics
where liquid compositions play the greatest part.
It does not have to be all biased buff, many
times piece buffs and bias bus are put together
2-to-1 or 1-to-1.
MR. HERZIG: But what is the proper type of equipment which you have mentioned?
MR.
TWYNING: Oh, pardon me I see what you meant.
The construction of spray equipment is quite
technical and you almost have to become involved
in this field to appreciate how technical
it is; making spray equipment is involved
and is quite an art and unless the equipment
is proper and of rugged construction so that
the vibrations inherent on an automatic machine
do not tend to loosen the nuts and packings,
you can have trouble. Spray guns should be
rugged so that rough handling in use doesn’t
prevent proper performance. The airports
in the wings of the air cap allow for pattern
control which is vital cost wise since overspray
is wasteful. Proper gun design and performance
are necessary in order to place all of the
composition on the wheel face.
New transistor analyzer, small, lightweight, and portable between laboratories, was developed by Armour Research Foundation engineers. The instrument is used to measure directly the circuit constants of transistors while they are in operation.
* * *
Ceramic
coating of extremely low thermal neutron
absorption coefficient was developed
by National Bureau of Standards for high
temperature protection of alloys in nuclear
reactors. Coatings were said to withstand
thermal shock resistance tests involving
quenching in water from as high as 2,000° F.
* * *
Battery
operated survey meter for neutron
measurement was developed for protection
of personnel around atomic accelerators
and reactors by Nuclear Instrument
and Chemical Corporation, Chicago.
Unit contains two neutron detectors,
one for thermal neutrons, the other—surrounded by a block of paraffin and a cadmium shield—for ”fast” neutrons
with energies of more than 1 ev.
New surface anesthetic not only provides prompt relief from surface pain but also low toxicity and low sensitization, according to Abbott Laboratories, scientists who developed it. New drug, called tronothane, is said to afford unusual freedom from skin irritations often encountered with topically applied anesthetics.
* * *
A new welding electrode is said to provide better weld quality in inert-gas, shielded arc welding of aluminum, according to Aluminum Company of America. The new electrode also can be used for tungsten-arc welding where filler wire is fed mechanically to the work.
* * *
A simple
method for producing furfuryl alcohol resin, invented by Erik R. Nielsen,
senior chemist at Armour Research Foundation, provides forbetter and
cheaper
manufacture of plastic pipe, hot-melt coatings, and molding powders.
Resin
intermediate is formed quickly and smoothly by heating furfuryl
alcohol in the presence of an activated alumina—without use of strong
acid catalyst as was required formerly.