Charge regulation of nonpolar colloids
James Hallett, David Gillespie, Robert Richardson, Paul Bartlett

TL;DR
This study investigates how the effective charge of nonpolar colloids varies with particle concentration, revealing a non-monotonic relationship that influences dispersion stability.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence of the complex, non-monotonic dependence of colloid charge on packing fraction, combining X-ray scattering and electrophoretic measurements.
Findings
Effective charge decreases then increases with packing fraction.
Charge stabilization remains efficient at high concentrations.
Non-monotonic charge behavior explained by screening regime crossover.
Abstract
Individual colloids often carry a charge as a result of the dissociation (or adsorption) of weakly-ionized surface groups. The magnitude depends on the precise chemical environment surrounding a particle, which in a concentrated dispersion is a function of the colloid packing fraction . Theoretical studies have suggested that the effective charge in regulated systems could, in general, decrease with increasing . We test this hypothesis for nonpolar dispersions by determining over a wide range of packing fractions () using a combination of small-angle X-ray scattering and electrophoretic mobility measurements. We find a complex dependence of the particle charge as a function of the packing fraction, with initially decreasing at low concentrations before finally increasing at high . We attribute…
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