Aqueous particle suspensions of many kinds are stabilized by the electrostatic potential developed at
their surfaces from reaction with water and ions. An important and less well understood aspect of this
stabilization is the dependence of the electrostatic surface potential on particle size. Surface electrostatics
are typically probed by measuring particle electrophoretic mobilities and quantified in the electrokinetic
potential (f), using commercially available Zeta Potential Analyzers (ZPA). Even though ZPAs provide
frequency-spectra (histograms) of electrophoretic mobility and hydrodynamic diameter, typically only
the maximal-intensity values are reported, despite the information in the remainder of the spectra.
Here we propose a mapping procedure that inter-correlates these histograms to extract additional
insight, in this case to probe particle size-dependent electrokinetics. Our method is illustrated for a
suspension of prototypical iron (III) oxide (hematite, a-Fe2O3). We found that the electrophoretic mobility
and f-potential are a linear function of the aggregate size. By analyzing the distribution of surface site
types as a function of aggregate size we show that site coordination increases with increasing aggregate
diameter. This observation explains why the acidity of the iron oxide particles decreases with increasing
particle size.
Revised: July 24, 2017 |
Published: February 15, 2017
Citation
Kedra-Krolik K., K.M. Rosso, and P.P. Zarzycki. 2017.Probing size-dependent electrokinetics of hematite aggregates.Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 488.PNNL-SA-125768.doi:10.1016/j.jcis.2016.11.004