Dr. Kurt!... I was re-reading the thread when I may have realized that it was you in the video. If so I want to make a public apology for the way I addressed you in an earlier post, I would have chosen different words had I sooner realized. I'll try to straighten out my posts to address you personally.
Cheers
Not a problem at all. I live in a peer reviewed world, and trust me I have been criticized far harsher than this.
I love being corrected, because I learn something new. Thanks for the detailed calculation, scutterflux! That figure 5% ethanol in VG was something I got from an e-liquid manufacturer, and was the general lore of DIY back when I did that interview, and I guess we never actually questioned it. Obviously we were wrong. I knew PG was much less viscous that VG, but about 1/25 is well below what I thought, but again, I never looked into it as rigorously as this. Clearly a 5% PG solution in ethanol would be unvapable, and not have much visible aerosol too. Would be quiet a buzz, however!
I really appreciate you so rigorously calculating viscosity like this. I definitely learned something here. Back when I was first doing DIY in 2009, and quickly figured out that PG caused all sorts of problems for me, we would "measure" relative viscosities by seeing how fast a few drops of a liquid would run down a tilted glass sheet or mirror. If they flowed the same rate, we assumed they were the same viscosity. Someone did this with ethanol and VG, and compared it to PG, and somewhere around 5% ethanol gave a similar flow rate to PG. All very imprecise and qualitative, and certainly not a viscometer, nor even how viscosity is actually measured, and does not take into account that those were flavored liquids too (more thinning), but that was the method in the DIY community. I never actually verified it! One, I didn't have an interest in using PG, and two, I didn't want to use ethanol any more.
My concern in DIY was how well my VG juices wicked and still vaped well. Flavors (mostly PG with often other small organics) tend to thin VG, and so does water, and I found that if %flavor + %water = ~22%, the juice would wick well for most of my attys. When I was using ethanol, it was %flavor + %ethanol = ~17%. Relating this to your excellent calculations, these juices were still much thicker than pure PG, but they were thin enough to work very well in my PVs. So what I should have said in that interview is that for unthinned flavored VG juices, about 5% ethanol (or about 10% water) if it is 10% flavor (standard) will allow it to vape well in the majority of attys, about like PG does.
The H-bond thing is rather complicated. They are the strongest intermolecular forces in pure PG, VG, ethanol, or water. In my mind, it is the ability of a substance to form long-range network interactions that determine its boiling point. Generally this also goes with viscosity, but clearly that is not the case with ethanol vs water, given this new information. But the H-bond influence does follow these two compounds in terms of bp. Water can give or take two H-bonds, so it is a balanced system, and long range networking is possible. Ethanol has an OH, so can give one H-bond, but takes two (two lone-pairs), so is not balanced...plus the ethyl tail that flaps around and disrupts interactions. So its bp is lower than water's. VG has 3 OHs, PG has 2, so neither are balanced, but more OHs make up for that compared to ethanol or water. Plus higher molecular weight means more London forces (weaker than H-bonds, but present). VG is also more polar than PG, and PG has a tail (CH3), so VG will form more H-bonds than PG, and more 3d networking.
But WHY water is less viscous than ethanol is a mystery to me. It has a higher surface tension, and higher bp and mp. Generally these go along with viscosity trends, but this one is baffling me.
Thanks again, scutterflux, for bringing some rigor to this discussion! I have learned much here!
