4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Interaction between colloidal particles on an oil-water interface in dilute and dense phases

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/27/19/194119

Keywords

colloids at interfaces; two dimensional; liquid interfaces; electrostatic interactions

Funding

  1. EU-ITN Comploids
  2. Royal Society Newton International Fellowship

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The interaction between micron-sized charged colloidal particles at polar/non-polar liquid interfaces remains surprisingly poorly understood for a relatively simple physical chemistry system. By measuring the pair correlation function g(r) for different densities of polystyrene particles at the decane-water interface, and using a powerful predictor-corrector inversion scheme, effective pair-interaction potentials can be obtained up to fairly high densities, and these reproduce the experimental g(r) in forward simulations, so are self consistent. While at low densities these potentials agree with published dipole-dipole repulsion, measured by various methods, an apparent density dependence and long range attraction are obtained when the density is higher. This condition is thus explored in an alternative fashion, measuring the local mobility of colloids when confined by their neighbors. This method of extracting interaction potentials gives results that are consistent with dipolar repulsion throughout the concentration range, with the same magnitude as in the dilute limit. We are unable to rule out the density dependence based on the experimental accuracy of our data, but we show that incomplete equilibration of the experimental system, which would be possible despite long waiting times due to the very strong repulsions, is a possible cause of artefacts in the inverted potentials. We conclude that to within the precision of these measurements, the dilute pair potential remains valid at high density in this system.

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