Poisson-Boltzmann Theory of Charged Colloids: Limits of the Cell Model for Salty Suspensions
Alan R. Denton

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the accuracy of the Poisson-Boltzmann cell model and effective-interaction models in predicting the thermodynamic properties of charged colloids, highlighting their limitations with increasing salt concentration and electrostatic strength.
Contribution
It systematically compares cell and effective-interaction models against simulations and nonlinear PB theory, delineating their validity limits for salty colloidal suspensions.
Findings
Cell model accurately predicts osmotic pressure in deionized suspensions.
Deviations occur at higher salt concentrations due to macroion interaction contributions.
No evidence of phase instability driven by monovalent microions was found.
Abstract
Thermodynamic properties of charge-stabilised colloidal suspensions are commonly modeled by implementing the mean-field Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) theory within a cell model. This approach models a bulk system by a single macroion, together with counterions and salt ions, confined to a symmetrically shaped, electroneutral cell. While easing solution of the nonlinear PB equation, the cell model neglects microion-induced correlations between macroions, precluding modeling of macroion ordering phenomena. An alternative approach, avoiding artificial constraints of cell geometry, maps a macroion-microion mixture onto a one-component model of pseudo-macroions governed by effective interactions. In practice, effective-interaction models are usually based on linear screening approximations, which can accurately describe nonlinear screening only by incorporating an effective (renormalized) macroion…
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