posted on 2014-12-23, 00:00authored byDorian A. H. Hanaor, Maliheh Ghadiri, Wojciech Chrzanowski, Yixiang Gan
By
means of the in situ electrokinetic assessment of aqueous particles
in conjunction with the addition of anionic adsorbates, we develop
and examine a new approach to the scalable characterization of the
specific accessible surface area of particles in water. For alumina
powders of differing morphology in mildly acidic aqueous suspensions,
the effective surface charge was modified by carboxylate anion adsorption
through the incremental addition of oxalic and citric acids. The observed
zeta potential variation as a function of the proportional reagent
additive was found to exhibit inverse hyperbolic sine-type behavior
predicted to arise from monolayer adsorption following the Grahame–Langmuir
model. Through parameter optimization by inverse problem solving,
the zeta potential shift with relative adsorbate addition revealed
a nearly linear correlation of a defined surface-area-dependent parameter
with the conventionally measured surface area values of the powders,
demonstrating that the proposed analytical framework is applicable
for the in situ surface area characterization of aqueous particulate
matter. The investigated methods have advantages over some conventional
surface analysis techniques owing to their direct applicability in
aqueous environments at ambient temperature and the ability to modify
analysis scales by variation of the adsorption cross section.