Roughness in Surface Force Measurements: Extension of DLVO Theory
To Describe the Forces between Hafnia Surfaces
Version 2 2018-06-09, 18:18Version 2 2018-06-09, 18:18
Version 1 2017-06-26, 18:05Version 1 2017-06-26, 18:05
Posted on 2018-06-09 - 18:18
The
interaction between colloidal particles is commonly viewed through
the lens of DLVO theory, whereby the interaction is described as the
sum of the electrostatic and dispersion forces. For similar materials
acting across a medium at pH values remote from the isoelectric point
the theory typically involves an electrostatic repulsion that is overcome
by dispersion forces at very small separations. However, the dominance
of the dispersion forces at short separations is generally not seen
in force measurements, with the exception of the interaction between
mica surfaces. The discrepancy for silica surfaces has been attributed
to hydration forces, but this does not explain the situation
for titania surfaces where the dispersion forces are very much larger.
Here, the interaction forces between very smooth hafnia surfaces have
been measured using the colloid probe technique and the forces evaluated
within the DLVO framework, including both hydration forces and the
influence of roughness. The measured forces across a wide range of
pH at different salt concentrations are well described with a single
parameter for the surface roughness. These findings show that even
small degrees of surface roughness significantly alter the form of
the interaction force and therefore indicate that surface roughness
needs to be included in the evaluation of surface forces between all
surfaces that are not ideally smooth.
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Eom, Namsoon; Parsons, Drew F.; S. J. Craig, Vincent (2017). Roughness in Surface Force Measurements: Extension of DLVO Theory
To Describe the Forces between Hafnia Surfaces. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.7b03131