The entrapment of residual hydrocarbon ganglia during water table fluctuations can produce a long-term contamination threat to groundwater supplies that is difficult to remove. The mobilization of entrapped hydrocarbon ganglia depends on the balance between capillary and gravitational forces represented by the Bond number. The present work focuses on the influence of the interfacial tension between the hydrocarbon and the surrounding water on the entrapment and mobilization of the residual ganglia. Laboratory column tests using glass beads as the porous medium have been conducted to determine the residual saturation of a hydrocarbon (Soltrol 170) trapped during vertical displacements due to a rising water table and the necessary decrease in interfacial tension to mobilize these trapped ganglia. The interfacial tension was decreased by the addition of isopropyl alcohol to the water phase. Saturations of the three phases (water, hydrocarbon, and air) were measured with a dual-beam gamma-densitometer. The results for residual hydrocarbon saturation at various interfacial tensions were combined with previous results for different particle diameters to provide a general relationship between residual saturation and Bond number. The relationship is expressed in an empirical correlation valid for Bond numbers between 0.001 and 1.2.