Towards an understanding of induced-charge electrokinetics at large applied voltages in concentrated solutions
Martin Z. Bazant, Mustafa Sabri Kilic, Brian D. Storey, and Armand, Ajdari

TL;DR
This paper reviews and extends classical electrokinetic theory to account for large applied voltages in concentrated solutions, highlighting ion crowding effects, dielectric responses, and ion-specific behaviors in nonlinear electrokinetic phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces modified electrokinetic models that incorporate ion crowding and dielectric effects to better explain experimental discrepancies at high voltages.
Findings
Ion crowding expands the diffuse double layer and reduces capacitance.
Charge-induced viscosity increases near surfaces decrease electro-osmotic mobility.
Ion-specific effects influence induced-charge electrokinetic flows.
Abstract
The venerable theory of electrokinetic phenomena rests on the hypothesis of a dilute solution of point-like ions near a weakly charged surface, whose potential relative to the bulk is of order the thermal voltage ( mV at room temperature). In nonlinear electrokinetic phenomena, such as AC or induced-charge electro-osmosis (ACEO, ICEO) and induced-charge electrophoresis (ICEP), several Volts are applied to polarizable surfaces in microscopic geometries, and the resulting electric fields and induced surface charges are large enough to violate the assumptions of the classical theory. In this article, we review the literature, highlight discrepancies between theory and experiment, introduce possible modifications of the theory, and analyze their consequences. We argue that, in response to a large applied voltage, the "compact layer" and "shear plane"…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectrostatics and Colloid Interactions · Electrokinetic Soil Remediation Techniques · Geophysical and Geoelectrical Methods
