Disruption of polystyrene latex aggregates in capillary flow

Disruption of polystyrene latex aggregates, formed in 1M citric acid/phosphate buffer solution at pH 3.8 through diffusion-limited colloid aggregation (DLCA) and in 0.2M NaCl solution at pH 5.5 through reaction-limited colloid aggregation (RLCA), was studied with respect to aggregate size and fracta...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inColloid and polymer science Vol. 278; no. 5; pp. 450 - 458
Main Authors Tang, S., McFarlane, C. M., Zhang, Z.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Heidelberg Springer Nature B.V 01.05.2000
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0303-402X
1435-1536
DOI10.1007/s003960050538

Cover

More Information
Summary:Disruption of polystyrene latex aggregates, formed in 1M citric acid/phosphate buffer solution at pH 3.8 through diffusion-limited colloid aggregation (DLCA) and in 0.2M NaCl solution at pH 5.5 through reaction-limited colloid aggregation (RLCA), was studied with respect to aggregate size and fractal nature. This was achieved using small-angle laser scattering in conjunction with a specially designed sampling method, which brought about the elimination of the disruption of the aggregates caused by a commercial stirrer sample unit. Aggregations were carried out in a mixture of deuterium oxide and water instead of water alone as a solvent to minimise sedimentation resulting from the differences in density between the latex particles and the electrolytes. An initial "steady state" in terms of aggregate size and fractal dimension was found to occur after around 20min and 2 days for DLCA and RLCA aggregates, respectively, at 25°C. No aggregate disruption was detected for DLCA and RLCA aggregates after their passing through a capillary tube for shear rates up to 1584 and 2694 s^sup -1^, respectively. At higher shear rates, significant decreases in the aggregate volume-mean diameter, D[4,3], occurred after shearing. The degree of reduction in D[4,3] was larger for DLCA aggregates in comparison to RLCA aggregates. The results would suggest that DLCA aggregates were more subject to disruption during shearing. A high degree of disruption was observed in turbulent flow for both aggregates.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Bibliography:SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 14
ObjectType-Article-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0303-402X
1435-1536
DOI:10.1007/s003960050538