The electrophoretic behavior of a spherical dispersion of polyelectrolytes of arbitrary concentration is analyzed theoretically under a salt-free condition, that is, the liquid phase contains only counterions which come from the dissociation of the functional groups of polyelectrolytes. We show that, in general, the surface potential of a polyelectrolyte increases nonlinearly with its surface charge. A linear relation exists between them, however, when the latter is sufficiently small; and the more dilute the concentration of polyelectrolytes, the broader the range in which they are linearly correlated. If the amount of surface charge is sufficiently large, counterion condensation occurs, and the rate of increase of surface potential as the amount of surface charge increases declined. Also, it leads to an inverse in the perturbed potential near the surface of a polyelectrolyte, and its mobility decreases accordingly. For a fixed amount of surface charge, the lower the concentration of polyelectrolytes and/or the lower the valence of counterions, the higher the surface potential. The qualitative behavior of the mobility of a polyelectrolyte as the amount of its surface charge varies is similar to that of its surface charge.
The electrophoresis of a liquid-liquid dispersion, where the dispersed phase comprises drops of a shearing-thinning Carreau fluid with a charge-regulated surface and the dispersion medium is an aqueous electrolyte solution, is analyzed theoretically under the conditions of low surface potential, uniform weak applied electric field, and arbitrary double layer thickness. This is the first attempt for the description of the electrophoretic behavior of a dispersion containing non-Newtonian drops with a charge-regulated surface. We show that, in general, the more significant the shear-thinning nature of the drop fluid, the lower the concentration of drops, the lower the pH of bulk solution, or the higher the concentration of dissociable functional groups on drop surface, the larger the mobility. Also, the mobility of a drop may exhibit a local maximum as the thickness of the electric double layer surrounding it varies.
The sedimentation behavior of a concentrated suspension of charged liquid drops is analyzed theoretically at arbitrary surface potential and arbitrary double-layer thickness; that is, the effects of double-layer polarization and double-layer overlapping are taken into account. Kuwabara's unit cell model is employed to model the suspension system, and a pseudospectral method based on the Chebyshev polynomial is adopted to solve the governing electrokinetic equations numerically. Several interesting phenomena, which are of significant influence if the internal flow inside a liquid drop is taken into account, are observed. Key factors are examined such as the thickness of the electric double layer, the magnitude of the surface potential, the volume fraction of liquid drops, and the viscosity of the internal fluid. The results presented here add another dimension to the previous studies, which include concentrated suspensions of rigid particles and mercury drops under low zeta potential, with the consideration of the internal flow of liquid drops and double-layer polarization, characterized by its viscosity and the zeta potential respectively. It is found, among other things, that the smaller the viscosity of the internal fluid is, the higher the sedimentation velocity of liquid drops. The higher the zeta potential is, the larger the decrease in sedimentation velocity. In particular, the sedimentation velocity of an inviscid drop (gas bubble) is about three times higher than that of a rigid one. The decrease in sedimentation velocity resulting from the effect of double-layer polarization achieves about 50% if the zeta potential is sufficiently high.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.