posted on 1997-04-16, 00:00authored byTadashi Muramoto, Kensaku Ito, Hiromi Kitano
The distribution of negatively charged colloidal particles near a
like-charged glass plate was investigated
using a confocal laser scanning microscope and video imagery. It
was found that the number of particles about 5
μm from the glass surface was higher than that inside the dispersion
and decreased gradually with distance. At
shorter distances, such as 1 μm, there were no particles due to an
electrostatic repulsion between the glass plate and
the particles. The “condensation” near the glass surface was
observed at low ionic strengths in the dispersion, such
as NaCl concentrations of 10<sup>-5</sup> M or lower, and the peak
in the particle distribution profile as a function of
distance
from the glass surface disappeared at 10<sup>-4</sup> M. The
peak height increased with the number of surface charges on
the
particles and with the surface ζ-potential of the plate. The
greater the number of charges on the plate and particles,
the more pronounced became the condensation. The dependencies of
the peak height indicated that the driving
force for the condensation was an electrostatic attractive interaction
between the like-charged plate and particles,
though such an interaction is not predicted by the conventional DLVO
theory.