Electrophoretic Mobility of a Semi-dilute Suspension of Spherical Particles with Thick Double Layers and Low Zeta Potentials

1997 ◽  
Vol 189 (2) ◽  
pp. 382-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ennis ◽  
L.R. White
1995 ◽  
Vol 288 ◽  
pp. 103-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Loewenberg ◽  
Robert H. Davis

The near-contact axisymmetric electrophoretic motion of a pair of spherical particles with thin electric double layers and differing surface zeta-potentials is analysed for low Reynolds numbers and moderate surface potentials. Near-contact electrophoretic motion of a spherical particle normal to a planar conducting boundary is analysed under the same assumptions. Pairwise motion is computed by considering touching particles in point contact; relative motion is described by a perturbation about the touching state using lubrication theory. Analytical formulae are derived for two particles of disparate sizes, and for the motion of a single particle towards a boundary; numerical calculations are performed for all size ratios. The results have a universal form with respect to the particle zeta-potentials. All results indicate that the electrophoresis is a much more efficient mechanism of near-contact motion than is buoyancy. An explanation for this finding is given in terms of the electro-osmotic slip velocity on the particle surfaces that facilitates fluid removal from between approaching surfaces.


1988 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 71-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. W. O'Brien

Sound waves can be generated in a colloid by the application of an alternating electric field. In this paper we describe the method for calculating this and the related electro-acoustic phenomenon of electric fields generated by sound waves. As an illustration of the procedure, we obtain formulae for these two effects for a suspension of spherical particles with thin double layers, in a parallel plate geometry.


Author(s):  
Edson M. Jimenez ◽  
Federico Méndez ◽  
Juan P. Escandón

In the present work, we realize a study about the influence of viscoelectric effect on the electroosmotic flow of Newtonian fluids in nanochannels formed by two parallel flat plates. In the problem, the channel walls have heterogeneous zeta potentials which follow a sinusoidal distribution; moreover, viscoelectric effects appear into the electric double layers when high zeta potentials are considered at the channel walls, modifying the fluid viscosity and the fluid velocity. To find the solution of flow field, the modified Poisson-Boltzmann, mass conservation and momentum governing equations, are solved numerically. In the results, combined effects from the zeta potential heterogeneities and viscosity changes yields different kind of flow recirculations controlled by the dephasing angle, amplitude and number of waves of the heterogeneities at the walls. The viscoelectric effect produces a decrease in the magnitude of velocity profiles and volumetric flow rate when the high zeta potentials are magnified. Additionally, the heterogeneous zeta potentials at the walls generate an induced pressure on the flow. This investigation extend the knowledge of electroosmotic flows under field effects for future mixing applications.


2016 ◽  
Vol 461 ◽  
pp. 32-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu-Wei Liu ◽  
Sumita Pennathur ◽  
Carl D. Meinhart

1977 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. K. Batchelor

The effect of Brownian motion of particles in a statistically homogeneous suspension is to tend to make uniform the joint probability density functions for the relative positions of particles, in opposition to the tendency of a deforming motion of the suspension to make some particle configurations more common. This smoothing process of Brownian motion can be represented by the action of coupled or interactive steady ‘thermodynamic’ forces on the particles, which have two effects relevant to the bulk stress in the suspension. Firstly, the system of thermodynamic forces on particles makes a direct contribution to the bulk stress; and, secondly, thermodynamic forces change the statistical properties of the relative positions of particles and so affect the bulk stress indirectly. These two effects are analysed for a suspension of rigid spherical particles. In the case of a dilute suspension both the direct and indirect contributions to the bulk stress due to Brownian motion are of order ø2, where ø([Lt ] 1) is the volume fraction of the particles, and an explicit expression for this leading approximation is constructed in terms of hydrodynamic interactions between pairs of particles. The differential equation representing the effects of the bulk deforming motion and the Brownian motion on the probability density of the separation vector of particle pairs in a dilute suspension is also investigated, and is solved numerically for the case of relatively strong Brownian motion. The suspension has approximately isotropic structure in this case, regardless of the nature of the bulk flow, and the effective viscosity representing the stress system to order ϕ2 is found to be \[ \mu^{*} = \mu(1+2.5\phi + 6.2\phi^2). \] The value of the coefficient of ø2 for steady pure straining motion in the case of weak Brownian motion is known to be 7[sdot ]6, which indicates a small degree of ‘strain thickening’ in the ø2-term.


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