Physics:Pouring

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Short description: Act of tilting a container with liquid


Preparation of teh tarik involves pouring the tea at great height from one container to another repeatedly
A foundry worker watching molten metal being poured out

Pouring is the act of tilting an open container which has liquid or bulk flowable solid inside of it, to cause the contents to flow out of the container under the influence of gravity. This may be done to move the contents to another container (such as pouring a shared drink from a bottle into individual cups), to coat a surface with the contents (as in pouring a syrup onto solid food, or the artistic technique of paint pouring), or simply to empty the original container.

Physical aspects

Depending on context, these changes may be desirable or undesirable. For example, in the preparation of Malaysian-style teh tarik 'pulled tea', the brewed tea mixed with milk is poured back and forth between two containers at an increasing distance in order to create a foam and to cool the tea.[1] In contrast, in industrial processes such as casting where a molten metal is poured into a mould, the pouring process can induce the creation of bifilms (doubly-oxidated surfaces folded over on each other) which lead to further defects in the final cast part.[2]

The difficulty of controlling all the variables when pouring purely by hand, along with the potential danger to people in the vicinity from splashing of hot liquid, has led to the development of automated pouring equipment for use in industrial settings.[3] There has also been research in robotics to develop robots which can pour drinks and granular ingredients such as sugar.[4][5] Systems for pouring face unique difficulties compared to other cases of robots manipulating physical objects: contact sensors cannot be attached directly to liquids, so measuring parameters of pouring, such as vibration and the amount of liquid which has been poured, may require the use of computer vision techniques.[6][7]

Cultural aspects

The metaphor of "pouring prayers" appears in Sanskrit, Latin, and Ancient Greek poetry, in reference to the literal pouring out of a drink onto the ground or over an icon as an offering in a libation.[8][9]

See also

  • Teapot effect, when a liquid being poured from a container runs down the spout or the body of the vessel instead of flowing out in an arc
  • Decantation, a process for separating a liquid from another liquid or a solid by pouring it into a separate container
  • Bulk material handling

References

Works cited