EN ISO 19403-3 (Part 3) specifies a standard method to determine the surface tension of paints, varnishes, and related liquid coating materials using the pendant drop method. It is an optical method that derives surface tension from the pendant-drop profile via Young–Laplace shape analysis. The standard notes that applicability can be restricted for liquids with non-Newtonian flow behaviour; results must be interpreted within those limits.
Providing ISO-aligned pendant-drop measurements with Young–Laplace fitting plus QC decision support (replicates, fit-quality gating, and trending vs a control). It does not replace the standard.
● Surface tension γ (median across ≥5 drops)
● Variability (IQR or SD) (repeatability / instability / contamination sensitivity)
● Fit QC pass/fail rate (axisymmetry + fit acceptance as a hard validity gate)
QC limits must be calibrated per material family (resin system, solvent package, additive/surfactant package, process + temperature) by correlating γ (and variability) to downstream outcomes (wetting/leveling/defect metrics). Recalibrate after supplier, formulation, or process changes.
Pendant drop (static) with Young–Laplace fitting; define and lock a test temperature; use a consistent density source at test temperature (required for Young–Laplace calculations); ≥5 drops; report median + IQR/SD; reject and re-run if the drop is not axisymmetric or the fit fails.
Applicability can be restricted for liquids with non-Newtonian flow behaviour; interpret accordingly and consider complementary measurements when repeatability is poor. Temperature control is essential for comparability. Contamination can appear as scatter and fit instability.
Measure an internal control (retained reference or known-good liquid) every batch/run. Reject and re-run if the drop is not axisymmetric or the Young–Laplace fit fails QC. Trend γ and replicate spread vs the control to detect drift early.