화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, Vol.286, No.2, 774-791, 2005
Diffusiophoresis and electrophoresis of a charged sphere parallel to one or two plane walls
The diffusiophoretic and electrophoretic motions of a dielectric spherical particle in an electrolyte solution located between two infinite parallel plane walls are studied theoretically. The imposed electrolyte concentration gradient or electric field is constant and parallel to the two plates, which may be either impermeable to the ions/charges or prescribed with the far-field concentration/potential distribution. The electrical double layer at the particle surface is assumed to be thin relative to the particle radius and to the particle-wall gap widths, but the polarization effect of the mobile ions in the diffuse layer is incorporated. The presence of the neighboring walls causes two basic effects on the particle velocity: first, the local electrolyte concentration gradient or electric field on the particle surface is enhanced or reduced by the walls, thereby speeding up or slowing down the particle; second, the walls increase the viscous retardation of the moving particle. To solve the conservative equations, the general solution is constructed from the fundamental solutions in both rectangular and spherical coordinates. The boundary conditions are enforced first at the plane walls by the Fourier transforms and then on the particle surface by a collocation technique. Numerical results for the diffusiophoretic and electrophoretic velocities of the particle relative to those of a particle under identical conditions in an unbounded Solution are presented for various values of the relevant parameters including the relative separation distances between the particle and the two plates. For the special case of motions of a spherical particle parallel to a single plate and in the central plane of a slit, the collocation results agree well with the approximate analytical solutions obtained by using a method of reflections. The presence of the lateral walls can reduce or enhance the particle velocity, depending on the properties of the particle-solution system, the relative particle-wall separation distances, and the electrochemical boundary condition at the walls. In general, the boundary effects on diffusiophoresis and electrophoresis are quite significant and complicated, and they no longer vary monotonically with the separation distances for some situations. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.