Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly

In this research we illustrate how particle-particle and particle-substrate interactions affect structure in interfacial colloidal systems. A number of tools are used to quantify characteristics of deposited structures. These results help understand the effects of colloidal system interactions and...

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Main Author: Fernandes, Gregory
Other Authors: Bevan, Michael A.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1276
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-12762013-01-08T10:37:33ZPreliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assemblyFernandes, GregoryForcesKineticsColloidalIn this research we illustrate how particle-particle and particle-substrate interactions affect structure in interfacial colloidal systems. A number of tools are used to quantify characteristics of deposited structures. These results help understand the effects of colloidal system interactions and deposition kinetics on the degree of ordering in interfacial colloidal structures. The first set of experiments involve 2.34 ?m silica colloids interacting with silica substrates in 0mM, 5mM, 10mM, and 100mM NaCl solutions. Only the 100mM NaCl solution resulted in rapid deposition driven by van der Waals attraction, while residual electrostatic repulsion produced levitation at lower ionic strengths. This allowed direct observation of the effects of varying magnitudes of attractive interactions on interfacial colloidal structures. Rapid deposition of positively charged 1?m latex colloids on negatively charged silica substrates driven by Coulombic and van der Waals attraction produced surface structures similar to those obtained with only van der Waals attraction. Experiments on 2.34 ?m silica colloids interacting with silica substrates in 10mM NaCl/pH 5.5 and 10mM NaCl/pH 10 conditions resulted in slower deposition rates. It was also found that slower deposition rates produced more compact structures displaying a higher degree of order. Another set of experiments was aimed at understanding interactions and structures formed in systems of polymerically levitated particles. Total internal reflection microscopy (TIRM) experiments revealed the influence of underlying substrate chemistry on interaction profiles in these systems. Basic experiments were also performed on the effects of varying amounts of specific ions on the dispersion stability in these systems. At conditions producing instability in polymeric systems, a similar degree of order was observed in comparison to experiments involving rapid deposition via salt addition in electrostatically stabilized systems. The results of this research clearly indicate that particle-particle and particle-substrate interactions are critical in determining structure formation by deposition. While the principal focus of this research is to study structures formed in various kinetic regimes, it also provides a basis for future studies aimed at tuning attractive interactions to produce equilibrium colloidal crystals on substrates.Texas A&M UniversityBevan, Michael A.2004-11-15T19:53:16Z2004-11-15T19:53:16Z2004-082004-11-15T19:53:16ZBookThesisElectronic Thesistext1804766 bytes131516 byteselectronicapplication/pdftext/plainborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1276en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Forces
Kinetics
Colloidal
spellingShingle Forces
Kinetics
Colloidal
Fernandes, Gregory
Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
description In this research we illustrate how particle-particle and particle-substrate interactions affect structure in interfacial colloidal systems. A number of tools are used to quantify characteristics of deposited structures. These results help understand the effects of colloidal system interactions and deposition kinetics on the degree of ordering in interfacial colloidal structures. The first set of experiments involve 2.34 ?m silica colloids interacting with silica substrates in 0mM, 5mM, 10mM, and 100mM NaCl solutions. Only the 100mM NaCl solution resulted in rapid deposition driven by van der Waals attraction, while residual electrostatic repulsion produced levitation at lower ionic strengths. This allowed direct observation of the effects of varying magnitudes of attractive interactions on interfacial colloidal structures. Rapid deposition of positively charged 1?m latex colloids on negatively charged silica substrates driven by Coulombic and van der Waals attraction produced surface structures similar to those obtained with only van der Waals attraction. Experiments on 2.34 ?m silica colloids interacting with silica substrates in 10mM NaCl/pH 5.5 and 10mM NaCl/pH 10 conditions resulted in slower deposition rates. It was also found that slower deposition rates produced more compact structures displaying a higher degree of order. Another set of experiments was aimed at understanding interactions and structures formed in systems of polymerically levitated particles. Total internal reflection microscopy (TIRM) experiments revealed the influence of underlying substrate chemistry on interaction profiles in these systems. Basic experiments were also performed on the effects of varying amounts of specific ions on the dispersion stability in these systems. At conditions producing instability in polymeric systems, a similar degree of order was observed in comparison to experiments involving rapid deposition via salt addition in electrostatically stabilized systems. The results of this research clearly indicate that particle-particle and particle-substrate interactions are critical in determining structure formation by deposition. While the principal focus of this research is to study structures formed in various kinetic regimes, it also provides a basis for future studies aimed at tuning attractive interactions to produce equilibrium colloidal crystals on substrates.
author2 Bevan, Michael A.
author_facet Bevan, Michael A.
Fernandes, Gregory
author Fernandes, Gregory
author_sort Fernandes, Gregory
title Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
title_short Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
title_full Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
title_fullStr Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
title_full_unstemmed Preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
title_sort preliminary studies of the influence of forces and kinetics on interfacial colloidal assembly
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1276
work_keys_str_mv AT fernandesgregory preliminarystudiesoftheinfluenceofforcesandkineticsoninterfacialcolloidalassembly
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