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1.
We have performed molecular dynamics simulations of polyelectrolyte adsorption at oppositely charged surfaces from dilute polyelectrolyte solutions. In our simulations, polyelectrolytes were modeled by chains of charged Lennard-Jones particles with explicit counterions. We have studied the effects of the surface charge density, surface charge distribution, solvent quality for the polymer backbone, strength of the short-range interactions between polymers and substrates on the polymer surface coverage, and the thickness of the adsorbed layer. The polymer surface coverage monotonically increases with increasing surface charge density for almost all studied systems except for the system of hydrophilic polyelectrolytes adsorbing at hydrophilic surfaces. In this case the polymer surface coverage saturates at high surface charge densities. This is due to additional monomer-monomer repulsion between adsorbed polymer chains, which becomes important in dense polymeric layers. These interactions also preclude surface overcharging by hydrophilic polyelectrolytes at high surface charge densities. The thickness of the adsorbed layer shows monotonic dependence on the surface charge density for the systems of hydrophobic polyelectrolytes for both hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces. Thickness is a decreasing function of the surface charge density in the case of hydrophilic surfaces while it increases with the surface charge density for hydrophobic substrates. Qualitatively different behavior is observed for the thickness of the adsorbed layer of hydrophilic polyelectrolytes at hydrophilic surfaces. In this case, thickness first decreases with increasing surface charge density, then it begins to increase.  相似文献   

2.
Polyelectrolyte spin assembly (PSA) of multilayers is a sequential process featuring adsorption of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes from dilute solutions undergoing spin-coating flow. Here, we report on the dependence of PSA multilayer buildup of poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) and poly(allylamine hydrochloride) on solution ionic strength and spin speed. We observed that at a given spin speed, the PSA coating growth rate (thickness/bilayer) and polymer surface coverage shows a nonmonotonic dependence on salt concentration, first increasing and then decreasing with increasing solution ionic strength. This is argued to be a manifestation of two competing mechanisms responsible for the layer formation. At low salt concentrations, the electrostatic interactions control the multilayer assembly process, while at high salt concentrations it is dominated by shear flow. We explain this nonmonotonic behavior in the framework of a Flory-like theory of multilayer formation from polyelectrolyte solution under shear flow. Additionally, the PSA process led to multilayer coatings with a radial dependence on thickness at lower spin speed in the shear-dominated regime. On increasing spin speed, such radial dependence subsided, eventually leading to uniform coatings by planarization. The surface topography of the multilayered coatings adsorbed at salt concentration less than 0.1 M was flat and featureless for all studied spin speeds. Unique morphological features in the films were formed at salt concentration higher than 0.1 M, the size of which depended on the spin speed and solution ionic strength.  相似文献   

3.
On the basis of a previously developed hydrodynamic model for adsorbed polymers the charge flow along a charged interface with adsorbed (uncharged) polymer is calculated. An effective electrokinetic layer thickness is defined and its dependence on the characteristics of the adsorbed polymer and the ionic strength is studied. It is found that tails are very important for the hydrodynamic effects considered because they effectively screen the solvent flow from inner parts of the absorbed layer. The electrokinetic layer thickness increases with decreasing ionic strength, and tends to a limit equal to the hydrodynamic thickness at very low ionic strength.  相似文献   

4.
Charging behavior and colloidal stability of amidine latex particles are studied in the presence of poly(sodium styrene sulfonate) (PSS) and KCl. Detailed measurements of electrophoretic mobility, adsorbed layer thickness, and aggregation (or coagulation) rate constant on varying the polymer dose, molecular mass of the polymer, and ionic strength are reported. Polyelectrolyte adsorption leads to the characteristic charge reversal (or overcharging) of the colloidal particles at the isoelectric point (IEP). In accordance with classical Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) theory, uncharged particles tend to aggregate because of van der Waals attraction, whereas charged particles are stabilized by electrical double layer repulsion. Attractive patch-charge interactions originating from the laterally inhomogeneous structure of the adsorbed polymer substantially decrease the suspension stability or even accelerate the aggregation rate beyond diffusion control. These electrostatic non-DLVO forces become progressively important with increasing molecular mass of the polymer and the ionic strength of the solution. At higher polymer dose of typically 10 times the IEP, one observes the formation of a saturated layer of the adsorbed polymer with a thickness of several nanometers. Its thickness increases with increasing molecular mass, whereby the layer becomes increasingly porous. This layer does not seem to be involved in the suspension stabilization, since at such high polymer doses the double layer repulsion has attained sufficient strength to stabilize the suspension.  相似文献   

5.
A theory has been developed for the adsorption of polyelectrolytes on charged interfaces from an aqueous salt solution. This adsorption is determined by the electrical charge density of the polyelectrolyte, the adsorption energy, the salt concentration, the molecular weight, solubility, flexibility, and concentration of polymer. The theory relates these parameters to the properties of the adsorbed polymer layer, i.e., the amount of polymer adsorbed, the fraction of the adsorbent interface covered, the fraction of the segments actually adsorbed on the interface versus the fraction of the segments in the dangling loops, the final surface charge density, and the thickness of the adsorbed layer. As polyelectrolyte adsorption should resemble nonionic polymer adsorption at high ionic strength of the solution or low charge density on the polymer, this work is an extension of the nonionic polymer adsorption theory to polyelectrolyte adsorption. The following effects are taken into account: (a) the conformational change upon adsorption of a coil in solution into a sequence of adsorbed trains interconnected by loops dangling in solution; (b) the interactions of the adsorbed trains with the interface and with each other; (c) the interaction of the dangling loops with the solvent; (d) the change in surface charge density of the adsorbent due to adsorption of charged trains and the accompanying changes in the electrical double layer which contains “small” ions as well as charged loops; (e) the (induced) dipole interaction of the adsorbed trains with the charged adsorbent interface. The theory is worked out for low potentials (Debye—Hückel approximation); in Appendix B an outline of a more complete treatment is given. The predicted adsorption isotherms have the experimentally observed high-affinity character. A relation between the adsorption energy, the surface charge density on the adsorbent, the degree of dissociation of the polymer, and the salt concentration predicts the conditions under which no adsorption will occur. For adsorbent and polymer carrying the same type of charge (both positive or both negative) the adsorption is predicted to decrease with increased charge density on polymer or adsorbent and to increase with salt concentration. If adsorbent and polymer carry different type charges, the adsorption as a function of the degree of dissociation, α, goes through a maximum at a relatively low value of α and, depending on the adsorption energy, an increase in the salt concentration can then increase or decrease the adsorption. At finite polymer concentration in solution the number of adsorbed segments and the fraction of the interface covered practically do not change with an increase in polymer concentration, whereas the total number of polymer molecules adsorbed increases slightly, as does the average fraction of segments in loops. The experimental results for polyelectrolyte adsorption have been reviewed in general and, as far as data are available, the predictions of the theory seem to follow the experimentally observed trends quite closely, except for the thickness of the adsorbed layer. This thickness is systematically overestimated by the theory and two reasons for this are given. The theoretical model implies a not too low ionic strength of the solution. Extrapolation of results to solutions of very low ionic strength is not warranted.  相似文献   

6.
The adsorption of quaternized poly(vinylpyridine) (QPVP) on controlled pore glass (CPG) size, over the ionic strength range 0.001-0.5 M was found to display nonmonotonic behavior as a function of pore size. Both adsorption kinetics and ionic strength effects deviated dramatically from behavior typical of adsorption on flat surfaces when the ratio of the pore radius Rp to the polymer hydrodynamic radius Rh became smaller than ca. 2. Ionic strength enhancement of adsorption for small pore sizes was observed at much higher salt concentrations than is typical for polycation adsorption on flat surfaces. The amount of polymer adsorbed per unit surface area of glass GammaA, in 0.5 M NaCl, exhibited a shallow maximum at Rp/Rh approximately 5. Since the value of GammaA for small pore size CPG is strongly depressed by the large surface area, an alternative and more interesting observation is that the amount of polymer adsorbed per gram of CPG, Gammaw, displays a strong maximum when Rp is equal to or slightly smaller than Rh. The efficiency with which QPVP binds anionic micelles to (negatively charged) CPG (grams of surfactant/grams of QPVP) increases strongly with diminishing pore size, indicating that the configuration of polycation bound to small pores favors micelle binding. Since the micelles are larger than small pores, the results indicate that when Rp < Rh, adsorbed polycation molecules reside only partially within the pore. The results of this study are supported by simulations of polyelectrolytes within cylindrical cavities.  相似文献   

7.
Coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations are performed to understand the behavior of diblock polyelectrolytes in solutions of divalent salt by studying the conformations of chains over a wide range of salt concentrations. The polymer molecules are modeled as bead spring chains with different charged fractions and the counterions and salt ions are incorporated explicitly. Upon addition of a divalent salt, the salt cations replace the monovalent counterions, and the condensation of divalent salt cations onto the polyelectrolyte increases, and the chains favor to collapse. The condensation of ions changes with the salt concentration and depends on the charged fraction. Also, the degree of collapse at a given salt concentration changes with the increasing valency of the counterion due to the bridging effect. As a quantitative measure of the distribution of counterions around the polyelectrolyte chain, we study the radial distribution function between monomers on different polyelectrolytes and the counterions inside the counterion worm surrounding a polymer chain at different concentrations of the divalent salt. Our simulation results show a strong dependence of salt concentration on the conformational properties of diblock copolymers and indicate that it can tune the self-assembly behaviors of such charged polyelectrolyte block copolymers.  相似文献   

8.
The adsorption of selected poly(ethylene oxide)-poly(propylene oxide)-poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO-PPO-PEO) tri-block copolymers on synthetic clay particles (laponite) has been investigated. The adsorbed amount and distribution of polymer was determined as a function of relative block composition and size, using the technique of contrast variation small-angle neutron scattering. The pluronic molecules appear to adsorb via a preferential segregation of hydrophobic PPO segments at the surface, with hydrophilic PEO segments dangling into solution. The effect of the PPO segments is substantial with large increases in adsorbed amount and layer thickness as the anchor fraction decreases/PEO chain length increases. This is in direct contrast to the behavior observed for PEO homopolymer adsorption (of much higher molecular weights) where the adsorbed amount and layer thickness are smaller and change little with molecular weight.  相似文献   

9.
 The stabilization and flocculation behavior of colloidal silica-particles with cationic polyelectrolytes (PE) is investigated. The zetapotentials, diffusion coefficients and flocculation rate constants of silica particles have been measured as a function of the adsorbed amount of cationic polyelectrolytes poly(diallyl-dimethyl-ammoniumchloride) (PDADMAC) of different molar masses and of statistic copolymers of DADMAC and N-methyl-N-vinyl-acetamide (NMVA) of various compositions at different salt concentrations and pH-values. Very fast flocculation due to van der Waals attraction occurs if the zetapotential is small. At low ionic strength this condition occurs just below the plateau of the adsorption isotherms where the surface charges are screened by adsorbed polycations. Additionally with high molecular polycations slow mosaic flocculation is observed at lower PE concentrations. At high ionic strength fast flocculation takes place at low macroion concentration due to the screening of the surface charges by adsorbed polycations and salt ions. At medium concentrations of polycations below plateau adorption slow bridging flocculation is observed. At plateau adsorption the suspensions become stabilized up to high ionic strength. At low salt concentration charge reversal at full coverage with polycations results in electrostatic repulsion. At high ionic strength the particles are stabilized sterically due to the osmotic repulsion of the long adsorbed PE tails. Therefore macroions of high molar mass are necessary to stabilize the suspension at high ionic strength. Received: 27 January 1998 Accepted: 23 March 1988  相似文献   

10.
The adsorption of BAB-type triblock copolymers (B=poly(ethylene oxide); A=poly(propylene oxide)) from aqueous solution onto hydrophilic silica particles is described with particular reference to the role of the copolymer composition. The adsorbed amount and the layer thickness were determined by the standard depletion method and photon correlation spectroscopy, respectively. Snowtex-YL silica was used as the adsorbent. The results show an increase in the adsorbed amount with increasing molar masses of both PEO and PPO blocks. The adsorbed layer thickness is found to depend strongly on PEO block mass. Both these parameters (adsorbed amount and hydrodynamic layer thickness) show a maximum as a function of the mole fraction of the PPO block present in the copolymer. The conformation of the adsorbed layer is determined by the surface–copolymer interaction; principally by the interaction of the hydrophilic PEO block with the silica surface. A good qualitative agreement of the experimental results with theoretical predictions and self-consistent mean field calculations has been found.  相似文献   

11.
A model is suggested for the structure of an adsorbed layer of a highly charged semi-flexible polyelectrolyte on a weakly charged surface of opposite charge sign. The adsorbed phase is thin, owing to the effective reversal of the charge sign of the surface upon adsorption, and ordered, owing to the high surface density of polyelectrolyte strands caused by the generally strong binding between polyelectrolyte and surface. The Poisson-Boltzmann equation for the electrostatic interaction between the array of adsorbed polyelectrolytes and the charged surface is solved for a cylindrical geometry, both numerically, using a finite element method, and analytically within the weak curvature limit under the assumption of excess monovalent salt. For small separations, repulsive surface polarization and counterion osmotic pressure effects dominate over the electrostatic attraction and the resulting electrostatic interaction curve shows a minimum at nonzero separations on the Angstrom scale. The equilibrium density of the adsorbed phase is obtained by minimizing the total free energy under the condition of equality of chemical potential and osmotic pressure of the polyelectrolyte in solution and in the adsorbed phase. For a wide range of ionic conditions and charge densities of the charged surface, the interstrand separation as predicted by the Poisson-Boltzmann model and the analytical theory closely agree. For low to moderate charge densities of the adsorbing surface, the interstrand spacing decreases as a function of the charge density of the charged surface. Above about 0.1 M excess monovalent salt, it is only weakly dependent on the ionic strength. At high charge densities of the adsorbing surface, the interstrand spacing increases with increasing ionic strength, in line with the experiments by Fang and Yang [J. Phys. Chem. B 101, 441 (1997)].  相似文献   

12.
Behavior of macromolecules in adsorbed layers   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A model for describing the behavior ot macromoiecuies in aosoroea layers is developed by introducing a concept of distribution density of layer thickness U based on stochastic process and probabilistic statistics. The molecular behavior of layers adsorbed on clay particle surfaces is discussed; the random distribution and its statistics of the layer thickness are given by incorporating experimental results with an ionic polyelectrolyte with the molecular weight of 1.08×106and chain charged density of 0.254.  相似文献   

13.
Two combinations of sodium poly(4-styrene sulfonate) (PSS) and poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) of different chain length and charge density are employed to construct multilayer films. The polyelectrolytes are assembled layer-by-layer on colloidal particles in the absence of salt. We have investigated the formation and electrical characteristics of the films by using electric light scattering technique. The results show that the film thickness is independent of the chain length when fully charged PAH (at pH 4.6) is combined with fully charged PSS. When the films are prepared with less charged PAH (at pH 6.7) and fully charged PSS, lower thickness is found for the film with shorter polymer chains. In all cases, the thickness increment realized on addition of the polymer with lower molar concentration is partially lost on exposure to the solution with higher concentration of the oppositely charged partner. When the film growth is regular (at equal molar concentrations of the fully charged polyelectrolytes), the ratio of PSS to PAH charge, estimated from the electro-optical effect values, exceeds 1. The electro-optical effect is also higher for the films ending with PSS when fully charged PSS is combined with less charged PAH (at pH 6.7). This reveals the key role of the charge in the last-adsorbed layer for the electro-optical behavior of the whole film.  相似文献   

14.
The stabilization and flocculation behaviour of colloidal latex particles covered with cationic polyelectrolytes (PE) is studied with photon correlation spectroscopy and zetapotential measurements. Diffusion coefficients, flocculation rate constants and zetapotentials have been determined as a function of adsorbed amount of cationic poly-(diallyl-dimethyl-ammoniumchloride) (PDADMAC) of different molar masses and of statistic copolymers of DADMAC and N-methyl-N-vinyl-acetamide (NMVA) of various compositions in water and at high ionic strength. Flocculation by van der Waals attraction can be observed if the zetapotential is low. This occurs, if the surface charge is screened by the oppositely charged cations. Furthermore, in the case of adsorption of high molecular polycations mosaic flocculation occurs if the adsorbed amount is low. At high ionic strength, flocculation takes place if the adsorbed amount is below the adsorption plateau. If the adsorption plateau is reached the suspensions become stabilized. In water the charge reversal at full coverage leads to electrosteric stabilization both with low and high molar mass polycations. At high ionic strength only polycations with high molar mass are able to stabilize the suspension. If a certain molar mass of the polycation is exceeded, steric stabilization of the suspension occurs due to the formation of long adsorbed PE tails and their osmotic repulsion. The layer thicknesses are determined as a function of the molar mass. Received: 4 July 2000/Accepted: 18 August 2000  相似文献   

15.
Surface properties of a series of cationic bottle-brush polyelectrolytes with 45-unit-long poly(ethylene oxide) side chains were investigated by phase modulated ellipsometry and surface force measurements. The evaluation of the adsorbed mass of polymer on mica by means of ellipsometry is complex due to the transparency of mica and its birefringence and low dielectric constant. We therefore employed a new method to overcome these difficulties. The charge and the poly(ethylene oxide) side chain density of the bottle-brush polymers were varied from zero charge density and one side chain per segment to one charge per segment and no side chains, thus spanning the realm from a neutral bottle-brush polymer, via a partly charged brush polyelectrolyte, to a linear fully charged polyelectrolyte. The adsorption properties depend crucially on the polymer architecture. A minimum charge density of the polymer is required to facilitate adsorption to the oppositely charged surface. The maximum adsorbed amount and the maximum side chain density at the surface are obtained for the polymer with 50% charged segments and the remaining 50% of the segments carrying poly(ethylene oxide) side chains. It is found that brushlike layers are formed when 25-50% of the segments carry poly(ethylene oxide) side chains. In this paper, we argue that the repulsion between the side chains results in an adsorbed layer that is non-homogeneous on the molecular level. As a result, not all side chains will contribute equally to the steric repulsion but some will be stretched along the surface rather than perpendicular to it. By comparison with linear polyelectrolytes, it will be shown that the presence of the side chains counteracts adsorption. This is due to the entropic penalty of confining the side chains to the surface region.  相似文献   

16.
Interactions between cationic bottle-brush polyelectrolyte layers adsorbed on mica across salt and oppositely charged surfactant solutions were investigated with the interferometric surface force apparatus, and the results were compared with what is known for similarly charged linear polyelectrolytes. Ellipsometric measurements demonstrated that the bottle-brush polyelectrolytes, which contain 45 units long poly(ethylene oxide) side chains, are more readily desorbed than linear equivalents when the ionic strength of the solution is increased. It is argued that this is due to the steric repulsion between the poly(ethylene oxide) side chains that reduces the surface affinity. The preadsorbed bottle-brush polyelectrolyte layers were also exposed to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) solutions. It was found that the presence of SDS affected the force profiles less than observed for similarly charged linear polyelectrolytes. This observation was attributed to excluded volume constraints imposed by the poly(ethylene oxide) side chains that reduces the accessibility of the charged polyelectrolyte segments and counteracts formation of large aggregates within the layer.  相似文献   

17.
Heparin was modified with adipic dihydrazide and covalently linked to surface-activated silica wafers. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used at each stage of derivatization and showed that successful immobilization had taken place. Surfaces were imaged with atomic force microscopy to determine the uniformity of the heparin layer as well as its thickness. In situ ellipsometry was used to estimate layer thickness as well, and to study protein concentration and adsorption time effects on the adsorption and elution kinetics exhibited by human plasma fibrinogen. The adsorbed amount of fibrinogen increased with time and concentration on each type of surface. Under all experimental conditions, fibrinogen adsorbed at a lower rate and to a lower extent on heparinized as compared to unheparinized silica. In addition, buffer elution experiments showed that fibrinogen was less tightly bound to heparinized silica. In order to examine behavior relative to fibrinogen mobility at these interfaces, the sequential adsorption of fibrinogen was recorded. The difference in adsorption rates between the first and second adsorption cycles, evaluated at identical mass density, indicated that post-adsorptive molecular rearrangements had taken place. In general, higher solution concentration and longer adsorption time in the first adsorption step led to more rearrangement, and these history dependent effects were more pronounced on the heparinized silica. These rearrangements are suggested to involve clustering of adsorbed fibrinogen, in this way increasing the amount of unoccupied area at the interface. These rearrangements were presumably facilitated on the heparinized silica by enhanced lateral mobility of fibrinogen at this negatively charged, highly hydrophilic interface.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of charge density, pH, and salt concentration on polyelectrolyte adsorption onto the oxidized surface of silicon wafers were studied using stagnation point adsorption reflectometry and quartz crystal microgravimetry. Five different polyelectrolytescationic polyacrylamides of four charge densities and one cationic dextranwere examined. The adsorption kinetics was characterized using each technique, and the adsorption kinetics observed was in line with the impinging jet theory and the theory for one-dimensional diffusion, respectively. The polyelectrolyte adsorption increased with pH as an effect of the increased silica surface charge. A maximum in the saturation adsorption for both types of polyelectrolytes was found at 10 mM NaCl concentration. A significant adsorption also occurred at 1 M NaCl, which indicated a significant nonionic contribution to the adsorption mechanism. The fraction of solvent in the adsorbed layer was determined to be 70-80% by combining the two analysis techniques. This indicated a loose structure of the adsorbed layer and an extended conformation at the surface, favoring loops and tails. However, considering the solution structure with a hydrodynamic diameter larger than 100 nm for the CPAM and a thickness of the adsorbed layer on the order of 10 nm, the results showed that the adsorption is accompanied by a drastic change in polymer conformation. Furthermore, this conformation change takes place on a time scale far shorter than seconds.  相似文献   

19.
Adsorption of cationic high molecular weight polyacrylamides (CPAM) (M(w) is about 800 kDa) with different fractions of cationic units tau = 0.09 and tau = 0.018 onto silica surface was studied over a wide range of pH (4-9) and KCl concentration (c(s) = 10(-3)-10(-1) M) by in-situ null ellipsometry. We discuss how the adsorbed layer depends on the bulk conditions as well as kinetically responds to changes in solution conditions. The adsorbed amount Gamma of CPAM increases with pH for all studied electrolyte concentrations until a plateau Gamma is reached at pH > 6. At low pH we observed an increase in adsorbed amount with electrolyte concentration. At high pH there is no remarkable influence of added salt on the values of the adsorbed amount. The thickness of adsorbed polymer layers, obtained by ellipsometry, increases with electrolyte concentration and decreases with pH. At low c(s) and high pH the polyelectrolyte adsorbs in a flat conformation. An overcompensation of the surface charge (charge reversal) by the adsorbed polyelectrolyte is observed at high c(s) and low pH. To reveal the reversibility of the polyelectrolyte adsorption with respect to the adsorbed amount and layer thickness, parameters such as polyelectrolyte concentration (c(p)), c(s), and pH were changed during the experiment. Generally, similar adsorbed layer properties were obtained independent of whether adsorption was obtained directly to initially bare surface or by changing pH, c(s), or the concentration of polyelectrolyte solution in the presence of a preadsorbed layer, provided that the coverage of the preadsorbed layer was low. Once a steady state of the measured parameters (Gamma, d) was reached, experimental conditions were restored to the original values and corresponding changes in Gamma and adsorbed layer thickness were recorded. For initially low surface coverage it was impossible to restore the layer properties, and in this case we always ended up with higher coverage than the initial values. For initial high surface coverage it was usually possible to restore the initial layer properties. Thus, we concluded that polyelectrolyte appears only partially reversible to changes in the solution conditions due the slow rearrangement process within the adsorbed layer.  相似文献   

20.
In order to elucidate the mechanisms of flocculation by polymer mixtures, the effect of adsorption of non-ionic poly(ethylene oxide) — PEO, two samples of strongly (SNF FO 4800) and medium charged (SNF FO 4350) cationic and two samples of medium (SNF AN 935) and weakly charged (SNF AN 905) anionic polyelectrolytes (PE) as well as their binary mixtures on the electrokinetic potential of bentonite and kaolin particles has been studied. It is shown that in the presence of PEO-anionic/cationic polymer mixture, the electrokinetic potential of particles is determined by the adsorption of the polyelectrolyte; neither cationic nor anionic segments can be displaced by the non-ionic polymer. In mixtures of cationic and anionic polyelectrolytes, the ζ-potential of particles is determined by the adsorbed amount of anionic polymer independently of the charge density of PE and way of addition of the mixture components to the suspension, i.e. (1) first adding the cationic polymer, then the anionic one, or (2) first adding the anionic polymer then the cationic one, or (3) adding an increasing amount of pre-prepared 1: 1 mixture. The highest absolute ζ-potential values are observed for pH 7.5 when the surface of bentonite or kaolin particles is “purely” negatively charged and the anionic PE layer is most extended because of few contacts to the surface. With decreasing the pH, the (negative) ζ-potential of particles decreases due to appearance of a small amount of positive charges on the surface that bond an increasing amount of negative segments and results in shrinking of the adsorbed layer of the anionic PE. It is shown also that the electrokinetic potential of particles in anionic and cationic PE mixtures at all studied pH (4, 5, and 7.5) depends on the spatial distribution of negatively charged segments near the surface. The regularities observed are explained by formation of long loops and tails of anionic segments on the surface because of the small number of contacts to the surface; the cationic polyelectrolyte forms on the surface a thin layer with a big number of contacts and which is hidden behind the more extended anionic polymer layer.  相似文献   

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