Journal of Materials Science, Vol.31, No.12, 3321-3324, 1996
Extensions of Polyacrylic-Acid Ammonium-Salts in the Adsorption Layer to Fluidize Alumina Slurries
An average shell volume occupied in the adsorption layer on alumina by a polyacrylic acid ammonium salts molecule (PAA) defined as the average area occupied by an adsorbed PAA on alumina multiplied by the average thickness of the water layer at the limit of thickening, has been calculated from the adsorbed amount of PAA and from the flow points of alumina in the presence of PAA of different molecular weights. A steric effect of the PAA dispersant on the dispersion of alumina resulted in a flow with no yield stress. This was due to the change of the extension of PAA in the adsorption shell from a sphere to an ellipsoid with a long axis which exceeded the effective distance that the van der Waals attraction force reaches at a molecular weight for the PAA of between 10 000-20 000.
Keywords:SURFACE-CHEMISTRY;SUSPENSIONS