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A rapid field Method for assessing the spreading Power of anti-malarial Oils*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

N. K. Adam
Affiliation:
Department of Chemistry, University College, Southampton.

Extract

It is essential that an oil used for killing mosquito larvae on the surface of stagnant water should cover the whole surface completely with a spread film. Only if the oil spreads completely over the surface can it be certain of reaching all the larvae, penetrating into their respiratory system, and so killing them. Although practically all oils (except the most highly refined mineral oils) will spread on clean water surfaces, most stagnant waters have surfaces so contaminated by surface films, visible or invisible, that their surface tension is reduced much below that of clean water. This hinders, or completely prevents, spreading of oils of low spreading power which would spread on clean water. Therefore, other things being equal, an oil with a high spreading power is preferable to one with a low spreading power; indeed an oil with a low spreading power may, in practice, be of little or no use. A simple method of determining spreading power is thus of considerable importance.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1946

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References

Adam, N. K. (1937). Proc. roy. Soc., (B) 122, p. 134.Google Scholar
Adam, N. K. (1941). The Physics and Chemistry of Surfaces. 3rd ed.Oxford. Chaps II and IX.Google Scholar
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Norris, A. & Taylor, T. W. J. (1938). J. Chem. Soc., 1938, p. 1719.Google Scholar