Langmuir, Vol.28, No.1, 92-103, 2012
Hydrodynamic Force on a Microparticle Approaching a Wall in a Nanoparticle Dispersion: Observation of a Separation-Dependent Effective Viscosity
Colloid probe atomic force microscopy was used to measure the hydrodynamic force exerted on a 30-mu m-diameter silica particle being moved toward or away from a silica plate in aqueous dispersions of 22-nm-diameter silica nanoparticles (6 or 8 vol %). Upon comparing the measured force to predictions made using the well-known expression of Cox and Brenner (Cox, R G.; Brenner, H. Chem. Eng. Sci. 1967, 22, 1753-1777) assuming a constant viscosity equal to that of the bulk dispersion, the measured drag force was found to become significantly less than that predicted at smaller particle plate separation distances (e.g., <500 nm). A recent theoretical paper by Bhattacharya and Blawzdziewicz (Bhattacharya, S.; Blawzdziewicz, J. J. Chem. Phys. 2008, 128, 214704) predicted that in a solution of dispersed nanoparticles the effective viscosity characterizing the hydrodynamic force on the particle should vary from that of the solvent at contact to that of the bulk dispersion at large separations. By adjusting the viscosity in the Cox and Brenner expression to make the predicted hydrodynamic force match that measured (i.e., the effective viscosity), a curve showing these exact characteristics was obtained. The effective viscosity profile was not a function of particle speed, and changes in the effective viscosity extended to separation distances of as large as 2 mu m (nearly 100 times the hard diameter of the nanoparticles). These results suggest that in the range of typical colloidal forces (on the order of 100 nm), the dynamics of particle motion in such systems are determined by the viscosity of the solvent and not that of the bulk dispersion.