Stanadyne, etal are talking about the clumps of water that form the "particles" in the oil/fuel. You can think of it this way if you like, rain drops are rather large particles of water, but a mist or a fog, are very small particles. Water doesn't mix with oil, so the droplets stay as separate clumps in the oil/fuel.... with distinct sizes. The same thing happens to the water in diesel fuel, or Waste Motor Oil.
When I first saw water jets cutting steel, they were water only, and the water was streamed through a laser drilled hole in a diamond nozzle. The pressures were around 30K to 70Kpsi. The steel essentially was bead blasted by water molecules. Adding other abrasives to the water makes it possible to cut even harder materials, such as tungsten carbide and some ceramics. The downside to adding abrasives is the nozzle is worn out more quickly. Diamond/water abrasive slurry through a diamond nozzle is going to wear the diamond nozzle pretty quickly.
-Chuck
When I first saw water jets cutting steel, they were water only, and the water was streamed through a laser drilled hole in a diamond nozzle. The pressures were around 30K to 70Kpsi. The steel essentially was bead blasted by water molecules. Adding other abrasives to the water makes it possible to cut even harder materials, such as tungsten carbide and some ceramics. The downside to adding abrasives is the nozzle is worn out more quickly. Diamond/water abrasive slurry through a diamond nozzle is going to wear the diamond nozzle pretty quickly.
-Chuck