Title: Electrokinetics
1Electrokinetics
of
Colloidal Dispersions
John Berg Chem E 515 Autumn, 2008
2DEFINITION OF A COLLOID
Ostwald die Welt der vernachlässigten
Dimensionen
Chem E 455 Surface and Colloid Science
Laboratory Autumn and Spring Quarters
3LYOPHOBIC COLLOIDS
4INSTABILITY OF LYOPHOBIC COLLOIDS
5LONG-RANGE VAN DER WAALS ATTRACTION
a
s0
6ELECTROSTATIC REPULSION RETARDS AGGREGATION
van der Waals attraction
7ELECTRICAL CHARGE AT AQUEOUS INTERFACES
8(No Transcript)
9 Ionization of surface functional groups
Parking area (nm2/group) pKa
pKa1 pKa2
10 Specific adsorption of ions
11ELECTRICAL DOUBLE LAYER
12THE GUOY-CHAPMAN DOUBLE LAYER
13Poisson equation (describes variation of
potential in a spatial charge distribution)
Boltzmann equation (describes variation of ion
concentration in an electric field)
14For a single, symmetric (z-z) electrolyte
for low potentials z?0 25 mV, sinh y y,
and
Debye-Hückel approximation
15ION CONCENTRATION PROFILES
Double layer thickness
16EFFECT OF ELECTROLYTE CONCENTRATION ON DOUBLE
LAYER THICKNESS
17REFINEMENTS OF DOUBLE LAYER MODEL
18(No Transcript)
19STERN MODEL (1924)
?0
Stern layer
Surface potential
??
Stern potential
?(x)
Stern layer thickness
?
20STRONG SPECIFIC ADSORPTION IN THE STERN LAYER
21ELECTROSTATIC REPULSION DEPENDS ON.
- The Stern potential, ??
- The thickness of the diffuse double layer, ?-1
22s
Forces between particles (surfaces)
Derjaguin Landau Verwey Overbeek
When (?/kT) ? 10, ? stability
23Controlling DLVO interactions
24Controlling electrolyte valence and concentration
For z 2, divide all Cs by 64 for z 3, divide
all Cs by 729
25Controlling effective Stern potential, yd
a 0.1mm T298K A21210-19J k-133Ã… e78.5
26HOW CAN WE MEASURE THE STERN POTENTIAL?
27ELECTROKINETIC EFFECTS
(electro-osmotic velocity)
V
Electro-osmosis
28ELECTROPHORESIS
Vp electrophoretic velocity
Relevant to colloidal dispersions
29THE ELECTROKINETIC EFFECTS
I. Externally imposed EMF produces motion 1.
Liquid moves solid is stationary 2. Solid
moves liquid is stationary
II. Externally imposed motion produces EMF
1. Liquid forced to move past solid 2.
Solid forced to move through liquid
30- At steady state
- ?E streaming potential
- i streaming current
31THE ELECTROKINETIC EFFECTS
I. Externally imposed EMF produces motion 1.
Liquid moves solid is stationary 2. Solid
moves liquid is stationary
II. Externally imposed motion produces EMF
1. Liquid forced to move past solid 2.
Solid forced to move through liquid
32Dorn Effect
33Electro-osmosis
34Integrating once
35Measurement of electro-osmotic velocity
Typically, V a few mm/min
36INTERPRETATION OF THE ZETA POTENTIAL
37ELECTROPHORESIS
Vp electrophoretic velocity
38MEASURING ? BY MICRO-ELECROPHORESIS
Electrophoretic mobility
39The measurement of electrophoretic mobility
Rank Brothers Mark II Microelectrophoresis System
FLOW CELL
40and
vx 0 at y 0.2113w and 0.7887w
41RELATING MEASURED uE TO ZETA POTENTIAL
?-1
When double layer is thin relative to particle
radius ?a gt 300
a
When double layer is thick relative to particle
radius ?a lt 0.1
42Spherical particles 1-1 electrolyte
Hückel
Smoluchowski
43Polyvalent electrolytes
C(?a)
?a
44Some ion properties
Moelwyn-Hughes, E.A., Physical Chemistry, 2nd
Ed., p. 859, Pergamon Pr., Oxford, 1961.
45Approximate solution for symmetric (z-z)
electrolytes
Good to order (?a)-1
OBrien, R.W., and Hunter, R.J., Can. J. Chem.,
59, 1878 (1981).
46Aqueous KNO3 solutions, 25C
47Pen Kem Model 501 Lazer Zee Meter
48ZETA POTENTIAL AS A QC VARIABLE FOR WASTEWATER
TREATMENT
49MORE MODERN METHODS FOR MEASURING ELECTROPHORESIS
Based on light scattering techniques
50Quasi-elastic light scattering (QELS)
Doppler shift in frequency (line broadening) of
scattered light due to particle motion
A instrument constant D particle
diffusivity Q magnitude of the scattering vector
Measure ?w ? D ? particle size
But ?w 103 Hz and w0 1016 Hz
51Heterodyning
52Electrophoretic quasi-elastic light scattering
Shifted autocorrelation function
53Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (PCS)
homodyning
Intensity pair autocorrelation function
Electrophoretic PCS
54Laser Doppler Electrophoresis (LDE)
_
55The Brookhaven ZetaPALSTM
56Your assignment..
For a colloidal dispersion of spherical silica
particles of a 500 nm in an aqueous solution
of 10-4N KNO3
1. Measure the electrophoretic mobility using the
Rank Bros. Microelectrophoresis System. 2.
Measure the apparent zeta potential using the Pen
Kem Lazer Zee System.
Calculate the appropriate zeta potential from
both measurements (using the equation of
OBrien and Hunter)
Observe the measurement of the electrophoretic
mobility using the Brookhaven Instruments
ZetaPALS System.
Compare results obtained (in terms of zeta
potential) by all three techniques.