Effect of Roughness and Elasticity on Interactions between Charged Colloidal Spheres

The effects of realistic roughness and elasticity on the interactions between charged silica spheres are studied as a function of surface potential, screening length, interfacial energy, and roughness. The repulsive force F rep that must be overcome to bring charged spheres into contact is relativel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2019-12, Vol.35 (48), p.15948-15959
Hauptverfasser: Monti, Joseph M, McGuiggan, Patricia M, Robbins, Mark O
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The effects of realistic roughness and elasticity on the interactions between charged silica spheres are studied as a function of surface potential, screening length, interfacial energy, and roughness. The repulsive force F rep that must be overcome to bring charged spheres into contact is relatively insensitive to elasticity unless spheres are hundreds of times softer than silica. F rep is also insensitive to roughness and interfacial energy. In contrast, roughness has a large effect on the binding energy of spheres and the force F sep to separate them. Both are lowered by 1 to 2 orders of magnitude by the measured surface roughness of less than 1 nm on 1 μm silica spheres. The reason is that interactions between rigid spheres are dominated by the highest surface peaks rather than the entire spherical surface. Elasticity can increase the pull-off force of rough spheres by a factor of 2 or more because additional surface area can be brought into contact. The implications of these results for shear-thickening transitions are discussed.
ISSN:0743-7463
1520-5827
DOI:10.1021/acs.langmuir.9b02161