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1.
This paper presents an investigation of the charging behavior of mineral oxide particles dispersed in apolar media. There are a growing number of applications that seek to use electrostatic effects in apolar media to control particle movement and improve aggregation stability. Progress is limited, however, by incomplete knowledge of the mechanism(s) of particle charging in these systems. It has been shown in a number of cases that the acid-base properties of both the particles and the surfactants used to stabilize charge play key roles. A mechanism for acid-base charging has previously been established for mineral oxides in aqueous systems, where the surface hydroxyl groups act as proton donors or receivers depending on the pH of the surrounding solution. In water, the pH at which the surface charge density is zero, i.e., the point of zero charge (PZC), can be used to characterize the acid-base nature of the mineral oxide particles. The current work explores the possible extension of this charging behavior to apolar systems, with the key difference that the surface hydroxyl groups of the mineral oxides react with the surfactant molecules instead of free ions in solution. The apolar charging behavior is explored by measuring the electrophoretic mobility of a series of mineral oxides dispersed in a solution of Isopar-L and AOT, a neutral surfactant in water. The electrophoretic mobility of the particles is found to scale quantitatively, with respect to both sign and magnitude, with their aqueous PZC value. This provides support for the theory of acid-base charging in apolar media and represents a method for predicting and controlling particle charge of mineral oxides dispersed in apolar media.  相似文献   

2.
The electrostatic stabilization of colloidal dispersions is usually considered the domain of polar media only because of the high energetic cost associated with introducing electric charge in nonpolar environments. Nevertheless, some surfactants referred to as "charge control agents" are known to raise the conductivity of liquids with low electric permittivity and to mediate charge stabilization of nonpolar dispersions. Here we study an example of the particularly counterintuitive charging and electrostatic interaction of colloidal particles in a nonpolar solvent caused by nonionic surfactants. PMMA particles in hexane solutions of nonionic sorbitan oleate (Span) surfactants are found to exhibit a field-dependent electrophoretic mobility. Extrapolation to zero field strength yields evidence for large electrostatic surface potentials that decay with increasing surfactant concentration in a fashion reminiscent of electrostatic screening caused by salt in aqueous solutions. The amount of surface charge and screening ions in the nonpolar bulk is further characterized via measurements of the particles' pair interaction energy. The latter is obtained by liquid structure analysis of quasi-2-dimensional equilibrium particle configurations studied with digital video microscopy. In contrast to the behavior reported for systems with ionic surfactants, we observe particle charging and a screened Coulomb type interaction both above and below the surfactant's critical micelle concentration.  相似文献   

3.
Electrophoretic inks, which are suspensions of colorant particles that are controllably concentrated and dispersed by applied electric fields, are the leading commercial technology for high-quality reflective displays. Extending the state of the art for high-fidelity color in these displays requires improved understanding and control of the colloidal systems. In these inks, reverse micelles in nonpolar media play key roles in media and particle charging. Here we investigate the effect of surfactant structure on reverse micelle size and charging properties by synthesizing different surfactants with variations in polyamine polar head groups. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and dynamic light scattering (DLS) were used to determine the micelle core plus shell size and micelle hydrodynamic radius, respectively. The results from SAXS agreed with DLS and showed that increasing polyamines in the surfactant head increased the micelle size. The hydrodynamic radius was also calculated on the basis of transient current measurements and agreed well with the DLS results. The transient current technique further determined that increasing polyamines increased the charge stabilization capability of the micelles and that an analogous commercial surfactant OLOA 11000 made for a lower concentration of charge-generating ions in solution. Formulating magenta inks with the various surfactants showed that the absence of amine in the surfactant head was detrimental to particle stabilization and device performance.  相似文献   

4.
Electrostatic interactions of colloidal particles are typically screened by mobile ions in the solvent. We measure the forces between isolated pairs of colloidal polymer microspheres as the density of bulk ions vanishes. The ionic strength is controlled by varying the concentration of surfactant (NaAOT) in a nonpolar solvent (hexadecane). While interactions are well-described by the familiar screened-Coulomb form at high surfactant concentrations, they are experimentally indistinguishable from bare Coulomb interactions at low surfactant concentration. Interactions are strongest just above the critical micelle concentration, where particles can obtain high surface potentials without significant screening, kappaa < 1. Exploiting the absence of significant charge renormalization, we are able to construct a simple thermodynamic model capturing the role of reverse micelles in charging the particle surface. These measurements provide novel access to electrostatic forces in the limit where the particle size is much less than the screening length, which is relevant not just to the nonpolar suspensions described here, but also to aqueous suspensions of nanoparticles.  相似文献   

5.
While the important role of electrostatic interactions in aqueous colloidal suspensions is widely known and reasonably well-understood, their relevance to nonpolar suspensions remains mysterious. We measure the interaction potentials of colloidal particles in a nonpolar solvent with reverse micelles. We find surprisingly strong electrostatic interactions characterized by surface potentials, |ezeta|, from 2.0 to 4.4 k(B)T and screening lengths, kappa(-1), from 0.2 to 1.4 microm. Interactions depend on the concentration of reverse micelles and the degree of confinement. Furthermore, when the particles are weakly confined, the values of |ezeta| and kappa extracted from interaction measurements are consistent with bulk measurements of conductivity and electrophoretic mobility. A simple thermodynamic model, relating the structure of the micelles to the equilibrium ionic strength, is in good agreement with both conductivity and interaction measurements. Since dissociated ions are solubilized by reverse micelles, the entropic incentive to charge a particle surface is qualitatively changed from aqueous systems, and surface entropy plays an important role.  相似文献   

6.
We report electrostatic stabilization of micrometer-sized TiO(2) particles at long range (several micrometers) in liquid and supercritical CO(2) despite the ultralow dielectric constant, as low as 1.5. The counterions were solubilized in dry reverse micelles, formed with a low-molecular weight cationic perfluoropolyether trimethylammonium acetate surfactant, to prevent ion pairing with the particle surface. Dynamic light scattering and settling velocities indicate a particle diameter of 620-740 nm. The electrophoretic mobility of -2.3 x 10(-8) m(2)/V s indicated a particle charge on the order of -1.7 x 10(-17) C, or 105 elementary negative charges per particle. The balance of particle compression by an electric field versus electrostatic repulsion generated an amorphous arrangement of particles with 5-9 mum spacing, indicating Debye lengths greater than 1 mum. Scattering patterns also indicate that chains of particles may be achieved in CO(2) by dielectrophoresis with alternating fields. The electrostatic stabilization has been achieved by solubilizing a small concentration of counterions in only a small fraction of the reverse micelles in the double layer. Whereas many low-molecular weight surfactants have been shown to form reverse micelles in CO(2), very few polymers are able to stabilize micrometer-sized colloids sterically. Thus, electrostatic stabilization has the potential to expand markedly the domain of colloid science in apolar supercritical fluids.  相似文献   

7.
The flotation efficiency of silica particles using the ionic surfactants, sodium dodecylbenzenesulfonate (SDbS) and cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CPB), have been investigated. Results from adsorption, electrophoretic mobility, dispersion stability and direct interaction force measurements are used to develop an understanding of the role of ionic surfactants in particulate flotation. Adsorption and mobility data indicate that SDbS adsorbs at the silica/solution interface, though without improving the flotation efficiency. CPB was found to adsorb on the silica particles as a result of electrostatic interaction; initially to neutralize the surface charge and destabilize the suspension, and at higher surfactant concentrations, to reverse the particle charge and re-stabilize the suspension. Direct force measurements in the presence of CPB confirm that the electrostatic interactions between approaching surfaces are neutralized at low CPB concentrations. Additionally, evidence for a strong adhesive interaction after contact is seen. At higher concentrations, the surfaces begin to recharge, and the adhesive interaction decreases in magnitude. The flotation efficiency was found to correlate well with the measured particle interactions, and to be a function of the particulate electrophoretic mobility.  相似文献   

8.
An optical method is presented that allows simultaneous determination of the diffusion constant and electrophoretic mobility of individual charged particles with radius down to 0.2 mum. By this method the size dependency of the effective charges and zeta potentials of individual particles can be investigated, as well as interparticle interactions and Brownian motion in confined geometries. The diffusion constant and mobility are determined from the power spectrum of the particle speed in a sinusoidal electrical field. The accuracy of the method was tested on PMMA spheres of known size in water. Experiments have been carried out on charged pigment particles with low concentration in a nonaqueous medium containing a charging agent. The mobility is found to be independent of the particle size.  相似文献   

9.
Micellar solutions made of a fully fluorinated surfactant, LiPFN, form water-soluble complexes with lysozyme in a wide concentration range. Such complexes are stabilized by electrostatic and, very presumably, double-layer interactions. The mixtures were investigated by combining electrophoretic mobility, DLS, and dielectric relaxation methods. The former gives information on the surface charge density of protein-micelle complexes and indicates that the resulting adducts retain a negative charge (i.e., charge neutralization is incomplete). The double-layer thickness of proteins, micelles, and protein-micelle complexes is also connected to the dielectric relaxation frequency. Changes in particle size (inferred by DLS), charge density, and double-layer thickness are closely interrelated to each other. A model was developed to quantify such properties.  相似文献   

10.
This work is focused on analyzing the electrokinetic behavior and colloidal stability of latex dispersions having different amounts of adsorbed ionic surfactants. The effects of the surface charge sign and value, and the type of ionic surfactant were examined. The analysis of the electrophoretic mobility (mu(e)) versus the electrolyte concentration up to really high amounts of salt, much higher than in usual studies, supports the colloidal stability results. In addition, useful information to understand the adsorption isotherms was obtained by studying mu(e) versus the amount of the adsorbed surfactant. Aggregation studies were carried out using a low-angle light scattering technique. The critical coagulation concentrations (ccc) of the particles were obtained for different surfactant coverage. For latex particles covered by ionic surfactants, the electrostatic repulsion was, in general, the main contribution to the colloidal stability of the system; however, steric effects played an important role in some cases. For latices with not very high colloidal stability, the adsorption of ionic surfactants always improved the colloidal stability of the dispersion above certain coverage, independently of the sign of both, latex and surfactant charge. This was in agreement with higher mobility values. Several theoretical models have been applied to the electrophoretic mobility data in order to obtain different interfacial properties of the complexes (i.e., zeta potential and density charge of the surface charged layer).  相似文献   

11.
The interaction of cetyl-trimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) with swollen and collapsed poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (pNIPAM) monodisperse nanogel particles was investigated by electrophoretic mobility, dynamic light scattering, and potentiometric surfactant activity measurements. The surfactant binds to the nanogel particles as monomers in the whole CTAB concentration range and binds in the form of surfactant aggregates as well above a critical concentration (cac) in both the swollen and collapsed state of the pNIPAM. The swollen particle system is a thermodynamically stable solution. The collapsed nanogel particle system is an electrically stabilized colloid dispersion, which coagulates when the particles are near the electrically neutral state. An analytically undetectably small amount of surfactant binding (5 × 10(-7) mol/g of pNIPAM) leads to a dramatic effect on the stability of the pNIPAM nanogel system. The electrokinetic potential versus surfactant concentration functions unexpectedly strongly depend upon the temperature around the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of the polymer, which was interpreted by the change of the polymer segment density in the surface layer of the collapsing nanogel particles.  相似文献   

12.
Reverse micelles are spheroidal aggregates formed by certain surfactants in apolar media. In contrast to normal micelles in water, the polar head groups of the surfactant molecules are directed towards the interior of the aggregate and form a polar core which can solubilize water (the “water pool”); the lipophilic chains are exposed to the solvent. The water of the water pool exhibits properties that (depending on the mole ratio of water to surfactant) differ from those of bulk water. Surprisingly, these reverse micelles are able to solubilize in hydrocarbon solvents hydrophilic molecules, e.g., enzymes and even plasmids, that are much larger than the original water-pool diameter. These biopolymer-containing reverse micelles can be viewed as novel microreactors, whose physical properties can be controlled through the water content. Remarkable is the ability of enzyme-containing micelles to react with water-insoluble, hydrocarbon-soluble substrates, as in the example of lipoxygenase with linoleic acid.  相似文献   

13.
The hydrophobic and hydrophilic components of the surface of talc materials in aqueous solution were determined using ionic surfactants and their polar headgroup adsorption isotherms. The hydrophilic and hydrophobic surface areas are inferred from the amount of probe molecule adsorbed and the structure of the adsorbed layer. Natural dispersion of talc shows at 298 K a pH of 9.4 and the electrophoretic measurements indicate that the particles are negatively charged. The hydrophilic surface area is estimated from the adsorption of benzyltrimethylammonium ions (BTMA(+)) through electrostatic interactions as supported by the increase of divalent ions in the bulk phase and the decrease in the exothermic displacement enthalpy. It was also observed from the adsorption isotherm of benzene sulfonate anions that the density of positive surface sites is very low and is thus neglected. The adsorption of an anionic surfactant essentially occurs through dispersive interactions between the nonpolar organic tail of the molecule and the hydrophobic surface. Furthermore, some assumptions on the structure of dodecyl sulfate surfactant aggregates at the interface allow the hydrophobic part of the talc particles to be estimated. The cationic surfactant adsorption has been investigated and found to corroborate the hydrophilic and hydrophobic area values first obtained. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.  相似文献   

14.
In the case of cationic polystyrene latex, the adsorption of anionic surfactants involves a strong electrostatic interaction between both the particle and the surfactant, which may affect the conformation of the surfactant molecules adsorbed onto the latex-particle surface. The adsorption isotherms showed that adsorption takes place according to two different mechanisms. First, the initial adsorption of the anionic surfactant molecules on cationic polystyrene surface would be due to the attractive electrostatic interaction between both ionic groups, laying the alkyl-chains of surfactant molecules flat on the surface as a consequence of the hydrophobic interaction between these chains and the polystyrene particle surface, which is predominantly hydrophobic. Second, at higher surface coverage the adsorbed surfactant molecules may move into a partly vertical orientation with some head groups facing the solution. According to this second mechanism the hydrophobic interactions of hydrocarbon chains play an important role in the adsorption of surfactant molecules at high surface coverage. This would account for the very high negative mobilities obtained at surfactant concentration higher than 5×10–7 M. Under high surface-coverage conditions, some electrophoretic mobility measurements were performed at different ionic strength. The appearance of a maximum in the mobility-ionic strength curves seems to depend upon alkyl-chain length. Also the effects of temperature and pH on mobilities of anionic surfactant-cationic latex particles have been studied. The mobility of the particles covered by alkyl-sulphonate surfactants varied with the pH in a similar manner as it does with negatively charged sulphated latex particles, which indicates that the surfactant now controls the surface charge and the hydrophobic-hydrophilic character of the surface.Dedicated to the memory of Dr. Safwan Al-Khouri IbrahimPresented at the Euchem Workshop on Adsorption of Surfactants and Macromolecules from Solution, Åbo (Turku), Finland, June 1989  相似文献   

15.
A capillary electrophoresis system that can apply arbitrary helium gas pressures at both inlet and outlet reservoirs was constructed. The system was used to investigate the effect of pressure on electrophoretic behavior of polystyrene latex particles. The electrophoretic mobility of latex particles was increased with the application of pressure (< 3.0 kgf/cm2). The shrinkage of particle diameter under pressurization was observed using a microscope, however, the magnitude of shrinkage was not enough to explain the increase in electrophoretic mobility. Therefore, the application of pressure might increase the electric charge of the latex particle. Since methanol inhibited the enhancement in the electrophoretic mobility of the latex particles, water might play an important role in increasing mobility.  相似文献   

16.
Microgel particles are cross-linked polymer particles. When dispersed in a good solvent for the polymer concerned, they are able to respond to a range of external stimuli by changing volume. Hence, microgel particles are suited to numerous applications (for example, controlled uptake and release) in the pharmaceutical, coatings, and water treatment industries. In this work, pH-sensitive, 0.5 wt % cross-linked poly(2-vinylpyridine) (PVP) microgel particles have been prepared and characterized. When the dispersion pH is decreased below 4.5, the pyridine groups become protonated and the microgel network becomes positively charged, causing the particles to expand. To investigate the possibility of using light as a trigger for effecting volume changes, the interaction of these microgel particles with a photodegradable anionic surfactant, 4-hexylphenylazosulfonate (C(6)PAS), has been investigated using dynamic light scattering and electrophoretic mobility measurements. The electrostatic attraction between the positively charged microgel network (at solution pH 3) and the negatively charged headgroups on the surfactant molecules caused a dramatic decrease in particle volume, and charge-reversal of the particles occurred with increasing surfactant concentration. The UV irradiation of phenylazosulfonate surfactants destroys the anionic headgroup of the molecules, and the microgel particles re-swell. The irradiation of PVP dispersions in the presence of C(6)PAS, along with mixed surfactant systems of sodium dodecyl sulfate plus C(6)PAS, has been investigated.  相似文献   

17.
18.
 Tetraethylammonium perfluorooctyl sulfonate (TEAFOS; critical micelle concentration, 1 mM), which forms a threadlike micelle in its pure solution, was adopted to study the structure of salted-out, solubilized micelles and microemulsions by cryogenic transmission electron microscopy. The concentration of the surfactant was kept constant at 60 mM. The micelle solution salted out with LiNO3 provided a surfactant phase in the presence of a clear interface. The surfactant phase was studded, being formed of homogeneously dispersed spherical micelles, and had no obvious threadlike forms. The micelles, which solubilized the maximum amount of perfluorinated oil, were spherical and had the same size as isolated spherical micelles in pure TEAFOS solution. The microemulsions were formed in the presence of perfluorinated alcohol as cosurfactant and the particles were rotund even when the concentration of the perfluorinated oil was equivalent to that for solubilization and the sizes increased with increasing oil content. The difference in size between the solubilized micelles and microemulsions with the same amount of oil suggested that the oil molecules had been solubilized between palisades of perfluorinated alkyl chains in the micelles and had dissolved in the cores of the microemulsions. Received: 10 September 1999/Accepted: 2 December 1999  相似文献   

19.
Specific features of surfactant diffusion in micellar systems are described in terms of mobility, i.e., the limiting velocity of a particle under the action of a unit force. Micellar solutions of nonionic and ionic surfactants are analyzed. A relation is established between average surfactant mobility and the mobilities of individual particles. Although micelles have a lower mobility than monomers have, the average mobility of surfactants is shown to increase rather than decrease upon micellization. In parallel, formulas describing diffusion coefficients are derived, with part of the formulas having been available in the literature.  相似文献   

20.
The encapsulation of TiO2 particles via miniemulsion polymerization is strongly dependent on the size and stability of the inorganic particles in the monomer medium in which they are initially dispersed. It was found from XPS and FT‐IR studies that both the hydrophilic and hydrophobic TiO2 particles, which were studied, have hydroxyl groups present on their surfaces, which can strongly interact with the amine end‐groups of the polymeric stabilizer, OLOA370 (polybutene‐succinimide diethyl triamine). It was found from the dispersion and adsorption studies that the amount of OLOA370 retained on the TiO2 particles is strongly dependent on the area exposed by the sonification that is applied to break up the aggregates in the dispersion process. The TiO2 dispersions in styrene monomer were themselves dispersed as miniemulsion droplets and subsequently polymerized. It was concluded from the density gradient column (DGC) analysis of the latexes obtained from the encapsulation polymerizations, that the stability of the inorganic particles in the monomer, as well as their particle size, significantly influence the encapsulation efficiencies. The use of the hydrophilic titanium dioxide particles in combination with the stabilizer, OLOA370, resulted in a good dispersibility, dispersion stability, and small TiO2 particle size. This lead to better encapsulation efficiencies compared to the hydrophobic particles. The poorer results obtained with the hydrophobic TiO2 particles were attributed to their larger particle size, which resulted from the reduced adsorption of the OLOA370. Fewer hydroxyls and the presence of the trimethoxy octyl silane (TMOS) groups, which themselves are unable to provide sufficient steric stability, are proposed to explain these findings.  相似文献   

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