Exceptionally strong double-layer barriers generated by polyampholyte salt
David Ribar, Clifford E. Woodward, Jan Forsman

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that stable polyampholyte salt clusters can create exceptionally strong surface repulsions, surpassing simple salt effects, due to brush-like layer formation and excluded volume effects, with implications for colloidal stabilization.
Contribution
The paper introduces a model showing how polyampholyte salt clusters induce strong surface barriers, explaining anomalous long-range interactions in concentrated salt solutions.
Findings
Polyampholyte clusters generate repulsions stronger than simple salts.
Brush-like layers at surfaces cause significant excluded volume effects.
Results suggest potential for enhanced colloidal stabilization.
Abstract
Experiments using the Surface Force Apparatus (SFA) have found anomalously long-ranged interactions between charged surfaces in concentrated salt solutions. Ion clustering have been suggested as a possible origin of this behaviour. In this work, we demonstrate that if such stable clusters indeed form, they are able to induce remarkably strong free energy barriers, under conditions where a corresponding solution of simple salt provide negligible forces. Our cluster model is based on connected ions producing a polyampholyte salt, containing a symmetric mixture of monovalent cationic and anionic polyampholytes. Ion distributions and surface interactions are evaluated utilising statistical-mechanical (classical) polymer Density Functional Theory, cDFT. In the Supporting Information, we briefly investigate a range of different polymer architectures (connectivities), but in the main part of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolymer Surface Interaction Studies
