Dictionary Definition
foam
Noun
1 a mass of small bubbles formed in or on a
liquid [syn: froth]
2 a lightweight material in cellular form; made
by introducing gas bubbles during manufacture v : form bubbles;
"The boiling soup was frothing"; "The river was foaming";
"Sparkling water" [syn: froth, fizz, effervesce, sparkle]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- , /fəʊm/, /f@Um/
Etymology
Old English fāmNoun
- A substance composed of a large collection of bubbles or their solidified
remains.
- He doesn't like so much foam in his beer.
- A foam mat can soften a hard seat.
- He doesn't like so much foam in his beer.
Derived terms
Translations
foam
- Albanian: shkumë
- Basque: apar
- Catalan: escuma
- Chinese: 泡沫
- Croatian: pjena
- Czech: pěna
- Dutch: schuim
- Esperanto: ŝaŭmo
- Estonian: vaht
- Fijian: vuso
- Finnish: vaahto
- French: écume , mousse
- German: Schaum
- Greek: αφρός
- Hungarian: hab
- Indonesian: busa
- Italian: schiuma
- Japanese: 泡 (あわ, awa)
- Korean: 거품은
- Kurdish:
- Malayalam: പത (patha)
- Portuguese: espuma
- Russian: пена (pena)
- Slovak: pena
- Slovenian: pena
- Spanish: espuma
- Swedish: skum
- Telugu: నురగ (nuraga)
foam rubber
- Dutch: Schuim
- German: Schaumgummi
- Italian: gomma piuma
Verb
- To form or emit a foam; to bubble.
Translations
Extensive Definition
The most general definition of foam is a
substance that is formed by trapping many gas bubbles in a liquid or solid. It can also refer to
anything that is analogous to such a phenomenon, such as quantum
foam. Often people mean polyurethane foam (foam
rubber), Styrofoam or some
other manufactured foam when they are using the term. It can be
considered a type of colloid.
From the early 20th century, various types of
specially manufactured solid foams came into use. The low density of these foams made them
excellent as thermal insulators
and flotation devices, and their lightness and compressibility made
them ideal as packing materials and stuffings. Some liquid foams,
called fire
retardant foams, found use in extinguishing fires, especially
oil
fires.
Foam, in this case meaning "bubbly liquid", is
also produced as an often unwanted by-product in
the manufacture of various substances. For example, foam is a
serious problem in the chemical
industry, especially for biochemical processes. Many
biological substances, for example proteins, easily create foam on
agitation and/or
aeration. Foam is a
problem because it alters the liquid flow and blocks oxygen
transfer from air (therefore preventing microbial respiration in
aerobic
fermentation
processes). For this reason, anti-foaming
agent compounds, like silicone oils, are added to
prevent these problems.
If foaming is desired, a foaming
agent may help.
Foaming around the mouth can be a symptom of
rabies in animals. The
term sea foam is used to describe the foam that forms on top of
seawater from the action of waves. In some ways, leavened bread is a foam, as the yeast causes the bread to rise by
producing tiny bubbles of gas in the dough.
Structure of foams
Real-life foams are typically disordered and have a variety of bubble sizes. The study of idealised foams is closely linked to the mathematical problems of space-filling and minimal surfaces. The Weaire-Phelan structure is believed to be the best possible (optimal) unit cell of a perfectly ordered foam, while Plateau's laws describe how the soap-films form structures in foams.Solid foams form an important class of
lightweight cellular engineering materials. These foams can be
classified into two types based on their pore structure. The first
type of foams are called open cell structured foams. These foams
contain pores that are connected to each other and form an
interconnected network which is relatively soft. The second type of
foams do not have interconnected pores and are called closed cell
foams. Normally the closed cell foams have higher compressive
strength due to their structures. Closed cell foams are also
generally denser, requiring more material though and
consequentially are more expensive to produce. The closed cells can
be filled with a specialized gas to provide improved insulation.
This is in contradistinction to the open cell foam which will fill
with whatever it is surrounded with. While filled with air - this
could be a relatively good insulator, however, if the open cells
fill with water, insulative properties would be reduced.
A special class of closed cell foams is known as
syntactic
foam, which contains hollow particles embedded in a matrix
material.
The closed cell structure foams have higher
dimensional stability, low moisture absorption coefficient and
higher strength compared to open cell structured foams. All types
of foams are widely used as core material in
sandwich structured composite materials.
foam in Catalan: Escuma
foam in Czech: Pěna
foam in Danish: Skum
foam in German: Schaum
foam in Estonian: Vaht
foam in Spanish: Espuma
foam in French: Mousse (physique)
foam in Ido: Spumo
foam in Italian: Schiuma
foam in Hebrew: קצף
foam in Dutch: Schuim (structuur)
foam in Polish: Piana (chemia)
foam in Portuguese: Espuma
foam in Sicilian: Scuma
foam in Finnish: Vaahto
foam in Swedish: Skum
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Foamite, acid, aerate, air, alabaster, automatic
sprinkler, beat, blubber, boil, breakers, breeze, bubble, bubbles, butter, carbon tet, carbon
tetrachloride, carbon-dioxide foam, carbonation, chaff, chalk, chip, churn, clay, cobweb, collar, cork, cream, cushion, deck gun, deluge set,
dough, down, dribble, drivel, driven snow, drool, dust, effervescence, eiderdown, ether, expectoration, extinguisher, fairy, feather, feather bed, feathers, ferment, fire apparatus, fire
engine, fire hose, fire hydrant, fireplug, fizz, fleece, floss, flour, flue, fluff, foam extinguisher, froth, fume, fuzz, gossamer, head, hook-and-ladder, ivory, kapok, ladder pipe, lather, lily, maggot, mantle, meringue, milk, mote, mousse, mouth-watering, offscum, paper, pearl, pillow, plash, plush, ptyalism, pudding, puff, pumper, putty, rubber, saliva, salivation, satin, scud, scum, sea foam, seethe, sheet, shower, sialagogue, silk, silver, simmer, slabber, slaver, slobber, slosh, snorkel, snow, soapsuds, soda, souffle, sparge, sparkle, spatter, spindrift, spit, spittle, splash, splatter, sponge, spoondrift, spray, sprinkle, sprinkler, sprinkler head,
sprinkler system, spume,
sputum, stew, stinging, stir, straw, sud, suds, super-pumper, surf, swan, swansdown, swash, thistledown, velvet, water, water cannon, wax, wet blanket, whip, whisk, white water, wool, yeast, zephyr