Alan Gardner wrote:Mark Lipton wrote:Evaporation -- there is no other choice. Once you accept that, you have to accept that liquid and/or gas is making it past or through the cork and capsule (this latter is no barrier, no matter how tight it may seem; I think that the original intent was to place a lead capsule on the bottle to discourage rats from nibbling on corks)
Mark Lipton
So liquid evapourates through the cork AND through the foil???
More likely, it perfuses
around an imperfect seal and then evaporates and passes as a gas around the capsule.
That seemed unlikely to me - hence my question. That's why I didn't accept it.
Not that I've ever put a lead seal over a beaker of water and left it for 30 years!
It's notoriously hard to seal
any container well enough to prevent gas exchange for years. Sealed ampules do the job, and a ground glass joint lubricated with vacuum grease also has the potential to do it, as do the pressure seals used in compressed gas cylinders.
So could we, in theory, find a non-permeable membrane that would seal the bottle?
And how does lead stop X-rays but not water?
Yes, PTFE (Teflon™) membranes will prevent gas diffusion if sufficiently thick (if not, you get Gore-Tex, which permits the diffusion of water vapor and oxygen but not liquid water). If I recall correctly, Stelvin closures have a PTFE liner to improve the seal. Crown caps also use some form of polymer to improve their seal. As for the X-ray vs. water comparison, it's apples and oranges: X-rays are stopped by lead because of its high density (increasing its cross-section to electromagnetic radiation), whereas water vapor can travel
around the lead capsule because it's imperfectly sealed to the bottle.
Mark Lipton