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1.
The boundary effect on electrophoresis is investigated by considering a spherical particle at an arbitrary position in a spherical cavity. Our previous analysis is extended to the case where the effect of double-layer polarization can be significant. Also, the effect of a charged boundary, which yields an electroosmotic flow and a pressure gradient, thereby making the problem under consideration more complicated, is investigated. The influences of the level of the surface potential, the thickness of double layer, the relative size of a sphere, and its position in a cavity on the electrophoretic behavior of the sphere are discussed. Some results that are of practical significance are observed. For example, if a positively charged sphere is placed in an uncharged cavity, its mobility may have a local minimum as the thickness of the double layer varies. If an uncharged sphere is placed in a positively charged cavity, the mobility may have a local minimum as the position of the sphere varies. Also, if the size of a sphere is fixed, its mobility may have a local minimum as the size of a cavity varies. These provide useful information for the design of an electrophoresis apparatus.  相似文献   

2.
The electrophoresis of a finite cylindrical particle positioned eccentrically along the axis of a long cylindrical pore is modeled under the conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electric field. The influences of the eccentricity of a particle and its linear size, the radius of the pore, and the thickness of the electrical double layer on the electrophoretic mobility of the particle are investigated. Some interesting results are observed. For instance, for the case of a positively charged particle placed in an uncharged pore, if the double layer is thin and the particle is short, the mobility has a local minimum as the eccentricity varies. Also, for a short particle the mobility at a thinner double layer can be smaller than that at a thicker double layer, which has never been reported for the case of constant surface potential. In general, the mobility increases with the increase in the eccentricity, and this effect is pronounced when the size of a particle is large and/or the radius of a pore is small.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of the presence of a charged boundary on the electrophoretic behavior of a particle is investigated by considering a sphere at an arbitrary position in a spherical cavity under conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electric field. Previous analyses are modified by using a more realistic electrostatic force formula and several interesting results, which are not reported in the literature, are observed. We show that the qualitative behavior of a particle depends largely on its position, its size relative to that of a cavity, and the thickness of the electric double layer. In general, the presence of a cavity has the effect of increasing the conventional hydrodynamic drag on a particle through a nonslip condition on the former. Also, a decrease in the thickness of the double layer surrounding a sphere has the effect of increasing the electrostatic force acting on its surface so that its mobility increases. However, this may not be the case when an uncharged particle in placed in a positively charged cavity, where the electroosmotic flow plays a role; for example, the mobility can exhibit a local maximum and the direction of electrophoresis can change.  相似文献   

4.
The electrophoresis of two identical spheres moving along the axis of a long cylindrical pore under the conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electric field is investigated. The geometry considered allows us to examine simultaneously the effects of boundary and the presence of a nearby entity on the behavior of a particle. The influences of the separation distance between two spheres, the thickness of a double layer, the ratio (radius of sphere/radius of pore), and the charged conditions on the surfaces of the spheres and the pore on the mobility of a particle are investigated. Several interesting results that are not reported in the literature are observed. For instance, although for the case of two positively charged spheres in an uncharged pore the qualitative behavior of a sphere depends largely on its size relative to that of a pore and the thickness of the double layer, this might not be the case when two uncharged spheres are in a positively charged pore. In addition, in the latter, the mobility of a sphere increases with the increases in the separation distance between two spheres, and this effect is pronounced when the ratio (radius of sphere/radius of pore) takes a medium value or the thickness of the double layer is either sufficiently thin or sufficiently thick.  相似文献   

5.
The boundary effect on electrophoresis is investigated by considering a finite cylindrical particle moving along the axis of a long cylindrical pore under conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electric field. The influence of the thickness of the double layer, the aspect ratio of a particle, the ratio particle radius/pore radius, and the charged conditions of the surfaces of the particle and pore on the electrophoretic behavior of a particle are investigated. We show that the effect of the aspect ratio of a particle on its electrophoretic behavior for the case where the particle is charged and the pore is uncharged is larger than that for the case where the particle is uncharged and the pore is charged. Also, depending on the parameters chosen, increasing the aspect ratio of a particle can either promote or hinder its movement, which is not reported in previous studies, and can play a role in electrophoresis measurements. Because both the electric and the flow fields in the gap between the particle and the pore are mediated by those near the top and the end of the particle, the end effect is large when the double layer is thick.  相似文献   

6.
The electrophoresis of a rigid, positively charged ellipsoidal particle at the center of a spherical cavity is investigated theoretically under the conditions where the effects of double-layer polarization and the presence of an electroosmotic flow can be important. The equations governing the problem under consideration and the associated boundary conditions are solved numerically, and the influences of the key parameters on the electrophoretic mobility of the particle are discussed. We show that if the cavity is uncharged, the effect of double-layer polarization yields a local minimum in the electrophoretic mobility as the thickness of the double layer varies. This local minimum disappears if the cavity is also positively charged. In addition to reducing the scaled mobility of an ellipsoid, the presence of the boundary is also capable of influencing the relative magnitudes of the scaled mobility for particles of various shapes. For instance, if the volume of an ellipsoid is fixed, the scaled mobility ranks as prolate > sphere > oblate if the boundary effect is unimportant, but that order is reversed if the boundary effect is important.  相似文献   

7.
The influence of a charged boundary on the electrophoretic behavior of an entity in a non-Newtonian fluid is studied by considering a sphere at an arbitrary position in a spherical cavity filled with a Carreau fluid under the conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electric field. The dependence of the mobility of a sphere on its position in a cavity, the size of a cavity, the thickness of a double layer, and the nature of a fluid is investigated. In addition to the fact that the effect of shear-thinning is advantageous to the movement of a sphere, several other interesting results are also observed. For instance, if an uncharged sphere is in a positively charged cavity, where the electroosmotic flow and the induced charge on the sphere surface play a role, the effect of shear-thinning is important only if the thickness of the double layer is either sufficiently thin or sufficiently thick. However, this might not be the case if a positively charged sphere is in an uncharged cavity.  相似文献   

8.
The boundary effect on the sedimentation of a colloidal particle is investigated theoretically by considering a composite sphere, which comprises a rigid core and an ion-penetrable membrane layer, in a spherical cavity. A pseudo-spectral method is adopted to solve the governing electrokinetic equations, and the influences of the key parameters on the sedimentation behavior of a particle are discussed. We show that both the qualitative and quantitative behaviors of a particle are influenced significantly by the presence of the membrane layer. For example, if the membrane layer is either free of fixed charge or positively charged and the surface potential of the rigid core is sufficiently high, the sedimentation velocity has a local minimum and the sedimentation potential has a local maximum as the thickness of the double layer varies. These local extrema are not observed when the membrane layer is negatively charged. If the double layer is thin, the influence of the fixed charge in the membrane layer on the sedimentation potential is inappreciable.  相似文献   

9.
The translation of a charged, elongated cylindrical nanoparticle along the axis of a nanopore driven by an imposed axial salt concentration gradient is investigated using a continuum theory, which consists of the ionic mass conservation equations for the ionic concentrations, the Poisson equation for the electric potential in the solution, and the modified Stokes equations for the hydrodynamic field. The diffusiophoretic motion is driven by the induced electrophoresis and chemiphoresis. The former is driven by the generated overall electric field arising from the difference in the ionic diffusivities and the double layer polarization, while the latter is generated by the induced osmotic pressure gradient around the charged particle. The induced diffusiophoretic motion is investigated as functions of the imposed salt concentration gradient, the ratio of the particle’s radius to the double layer thickness, the cylinder’s aspect ratio (length/radius), the ratio of the nanopore size to the particle size, the surface charge densities of the nanoparticle and the nanopore, and the type of the salt used. The induced diffusiophoretic motion of a nanorod in an uncharged nanopore is mainly governed by the induced electrophoresis, driven by the induced electric field arising from the double layer polarization. The induced particle motion is driven by the induced electroosmotic flow, if the charges of the nanorod and nanopore wall have the same sign.  相似文献   

10.
The electrophoresis of a spherical particle along the axis of a cylindrical pore is investigated under conditions of low surface potential and thick double layer. In particular, the effect of electroosmotic flow is taken into account. The results of numerical simulation reveal that if both particle and pore are positively charged, the variation of the mobility of a particle may have a local minimum as the thickness of the double layer varies, which is not reported in the literature. This is mainly due to the charge induced on the particle surface, which arises from the presence of the charged boundary. Depending upon the level of the surface potential of the pore, the presence of the local minima may lead to a reversal in the direction of particle movement as the thickness of the double layer surrounding it varies: if the surface potential is either too low or too high, reversal does not occur; if it has a medium level, reversal occurs twice. This interesting observation can play a role in electrophoresis measurements. Previous analysis predicts that reversal always occurs once, regardless of the level of the surface potential of the pore.  相似文献   

11.
Electrophoresis is one of the most widely used analytical tools for the quantification of the charged conditions on the surface of fine particles including biological entities. Although it has been studied extensively in the past, relevant results for the case when the dispersion medium is non-Newtonian are very limited. This may occur, for example, when the concentration of the dispersed phase is not low, which is not uncommon in practice. Here, the electrophoresis of a concentrated spherical dispersion in a Carreau fluid is analyzed theoretically under the conditions of low electric potential and weak external applied electrical field. A pseudospectral method coupled with a Newton-Raphson iteration procedure is used to solve the electrokinetic equations describing the phenomenon under consideration. We conclude that the more significant the shear thinning effect of the fluid, the larger the mobility, and this phenomenon is pronounced for the case when the double layer surrounding a particle is thin. We show that if the double layer is thin and the effect of shear thinning is significant, a second vortex can be observed in the neighborhood of a particle.  相似文献   

12.
The transient electrophoretic response of a homogeneous suspension of spherical particles to the step application of an electric field is analyzed. The electric double layer encompassing each particle is assumed to be thin but finite, and the effect of dynamic electroosmosis within it is incorporated. The momentum equation for the fluid outside the double layers is solved through the use of a unit cell model. Closed‐form formulas for the time‐evolving electrophoretic and settling velocities of the particles in the Laplace transform are obtained in terms of the electrokinetic radius, relative mass density, and volume fraction of the particles. The time scale for the development of electrophoresis and sedimentation is significantly smaller for a suspension with a higher particle volume fraction or a smaller particle‐to‐fluid density ratio, and the electrophoretic mobility at any instant increases with an increase in the electrokinetic particle radius. The transient electrophoretic mobility is a decreasing function of the particle volume fraction if the particle‐to‐fluid density ratio is relatively small, but it may increase with an increase in the particle volume fraction if this density ratio is relatively large. The particle interaction effect in a suspension on the transient electrophoresis is much weaker than that on the transient sedimentation of the particles.  相似文献   

13.
Boundary effects on the electrophoretic behavior of a charged entity are of both fundamental and practical significance. Here, they are examined by considering the case where a sphere is at an arbitrary position in a spherical cavity under conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electrical field. Previous analyses are extended to the case of a non-Newtonian fluid, and a Carreau model is adopted for this purpose. The effects of key parameters such as the thickness of a double layer, the relative sizes of particle and cavity, the position of a particle, and the nature of a fluid on the electrophoretic mobility of a particle are discussed. Several interesting phenomena are observed. For example, if the applied electric field points toward north, the mobility of a particle has a local maximum when it is at the center of a cavity. However, if a particle is sufficiently close to the north pole of a cavity, its mobility exhibits a local minimum as its position varies. This does not occur when the particle is close to the south pole of the cavity; instead, it may move in the direction opposite to that of the applied electric field. For a Newtonian fluid, if a particle is close to the north pole of a cavity, its upward movement yields a clockwise (counterclockwise) vortex near the north pole of the cavity and a counterclockwise (clockwise) vortex near the south pole of the cavity on its right (left)-hand side. The latter is not observed for a Carreau fluid.  相似文献   

14.
The influence of a charged boundary on the electrophoretic behavior of a particle is investigated by considering the electrophoresis of a nonconducting ellipsoid along the axis of a cylindrical pore at the level of the linear Poisson-Boltzmann equation ignoring the polarization effect. The problem considered simulates the electrophoresis conducted in a narrow space such as capillary electrophoresis and electrophoresis through a porous medium. Here, because the effect of electroosmotic flow can be important the electrophoretic behavior is much more complicated than that for the case where a boundary is uncharged. The influences of the thickness of double layer, the aspect ratio of an ellipsoid, the relative radius of a pore, and the charge conditions on the ellipsoid and pore surfaces on the mobility of the ellipsoid are discussed. Several interesting but nonintuitive electrophoretic behaviors are observed.  相似文献   

15.
The electrophoresis of a charge-regulated spherical particle at an arbitrary position in a charged spherical cavity is modeled under conditions of low surface potential (<25 mV) and weak applied electric field (<25 kV/m). The charged cavity allows us to simulate the effect of electroosmotic flow, and the charge-regulated nature of the particle permits us to model various types of surface. The problem studied previously is reanalyzed based on a more rigorous electric force formula. In particular, the influences of various types of charged conditions on the electrophoretic behavior of a particle and the roles of all the relevant forces acting on the particle are examined in detail. Several new results are found. For instance, the mobility of a particle has a local minimum as the thickness of a double layer varies, which is not seen in the cases where the surface of a particle is maintained at a constant potential and at a constant charge density.  相似文献   

16.
An analytical study is presented for the quasisteady sedimentation of a charged spherical particle located at the center of a charged spherical cavity. The overlap of the electric double layers is allowed, and the polarization (relaxation) effect in the double layers is considered. The electrokinetic equations that govern the ionic concentration distributions, electric potential profile, and fluid flow field in the electrolyte solution are linearized assuming that the system is only slightly distorted from equilibrium. Using a perturbation method, these linearized equations are solved for a symmetric electrolyte with the surface charge densities of the particle and cavity as the small perturbation parameters. An analytical expression for the settling velocity of the charged sphere is obtained from a balance among the gravitational, electrostatic, and hydrodynamic forces acting on it. Our results indicate that the presence of the particle charge reduces the magnitude of the sedimentation velocity of the particle in an uncharged cavity and the presence of the fixed charge at the cavity surface increases the magnitude of the sedimentation velocity of an uncharged particle in a charged cavity. For the case of a charged sphere settling in a charged cavity with equivalent surface charge densities, the net effect of the fixed charges will increase the sedimentation velocity of the particle. For the case of a charged sphere settling in a charged cavity with their surface charge densities in opposite signs, the net effect of the fixed charges in general reduces/increases the sedimentation velocity of the particle if the surface charge density of the particle has a greater/smaller magnitude than that of the cavity. The effect of the surface charge at the cavity wall on the sedimentation of a colloidal particle is found to increase with a decrease in the particle-to-cavity size ratio and can be significant in appropriate situations.  相似文献   

17.
The electrophoresis of a rigid, charge-regulated, spherical particle normal to a large disk is investigated under the conditions of low surface potential and weak applied electric field. We show that, although the presence of a charged disk does not generate an electroosmotic flow, it affects particle motion appreciably through inducing charge on its surface and establishing an osmotic pressure field. The competition between the hydrodynamic force and the electric force may yields a local extremum in mobility; it is also possible that the direction of particle movement is reversed. In general, if a particle remains at constant surface potential, a decrease in the thickness of double layer has the effect of increasing the electrostatic force acting on it so that its mobility increases. However, this might not be the case for a charged-regulated particle because an excess hydrodynamic force is enhanced. For a fixed separation distance, the influence of a charged disk on mobility may reduce to a minimum if the bulk concentration of hydrogen ion is equal to the dissociation constant of the monoprotic acidic functional groups on particle surface.  相似文献   

18.
Transient electrophoresis of dielectric spheres   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The dynamic electrophoretic response of a spherical dielectric particle suspended in an electrolyte solution to a step change in the applied electrics field is analytically studied. The electrical double layer surrounding the particle may have either a small but finite thickness or a very large thickness relative to the particle radius. For the case of electrophoresis of a particle with a thin double layer, the local electroosmotic velocity at the outer edge of the double layer evolving with time after the external field is imposed is used as an apparent slip boundary condition at the particle surface so that the unsteady equation of motion for the fluid flow outside the double layer is solved. Closed-form formulas for the transient electrophoretic mobility of the particle are derived as functions of relevant parameters. The results demonstrate that, when the double layer surrounding the particle is relatively thin, the normalized electrophoretic mobility at a given dimensionless time decreases monotonically with a decrease in the parameter kappaa, where kappa(-1) is the Debye screening length and a is the particle radius. When the double layer of the particle is relatively thick, the particle mobility can have magnitudes comparable to those for a particle with a thin double layer in the initial stage, but will become much smaller afterward. In general, the effect of the relaxation time for transient electrophoresis is negligible, regardless of the value of kappaa.  相似文献   

19.
An analytical study is presented for the quasi-steady electrophoretic motion of a dielectric sphere situated at the center of a spherical cavity when the surface potentials are arbitrarily nonuniform. The applied electric field is constant, and the electric double layers adjacent to the solid surfaces are assumed to be much thinner than the particle radius and the gap width between the surfaces. The presence of the cavity wall causes three basic effects on the particle velocity: (1) the local electric field on the particle surface is enhanced or reduced by the wall; (2) the wall increases the viscous retardation of the moving particle; and (3) a circulating electroosmotic flow of the suspending fluid exists because of the interaction between the electric field and the charged wall. The Laplace and Stokes equations are solved analytically for the electric potential and velocity fields, respectively, in the fluid phase, and explicit formulas for the electrophoretic and angular velocities of the particle are obtained. To apply these formulas, one has to calculate only the monopole, dipole, and quadrupole moments of the zeta-potential distributions at the particle and cavity surfaces. It is found that the contribution from the electroosmotic flow developing from the interaction of the imposed electric field with the thin double layer adjacent to the cavity wall and the contribution from the wall-corrected electrophoretic driving force to the particle velocities can be superimposed as a result of the linearity of the problem.  相似文献   

20.
The dynamic mobility of a spherical dispersion of soft particles, where a particle comprises a rigid core and a membrane layer, is evaluated for the case when the shear stress across the membrane layer-liquid interface is discontinuous, the so-called stress-jump condition. We show that, due to the effect of double-layer deformation, the magnitude of the dynamic mobility of a particle has a local maximum and the corresponding phase angle has a negative (phase lead) local minimum at a low to medium level of the frequency of the applied electric field. This effect becomes insignificant if the frequency of the applied electric field is sufficiently high. The stress-jump condition may lead to a significant influence on the drag, and consequently the mobility of a particle. The degree of influence depends upon the sign of the stress-jump coefficient and the charged conditions of the membrane layer of the particle.  相似文献   

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