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Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of surface potential at amphoteric surfaces during particle–particle interaction

TLDR
In this article, a model is presented whereby a system of two interacting electrical double layers can minimise its electrical free energy at all distances of separation, where the surface charge on each particle is described in terms of surface site equilibria which maintain constant chemical potential of potential determining ions.
Abstract
A model is presented whereby a system of two interacting electrical double layers can minimise its electrical free energy at all distances of separation. The surface charge on each particle is described in terms of surface site equilibria which maintain constant chemical potential of potential determining ions. The ability of the system to react (i.e. buffer) to changes in the interparticle medium during approach, depends on the surface site dissociation constants, the point of zero charge of the surface and the ionic strength. It is shown that essentially perfect regulation, i.e. essentially infinite buffer capacity, is observed with systems such as AgI for which the potential of the single double layer is given by the Nernst equation; for such a system the usual assumption of interaction at constant potential is sensibly correct. For systems where the activity of potential determining ions is set at a value far removed from a surface dissociation constant the interaction is well approximated by constant charge interaction. The interaction with regulation involves solving a set of transcendental equations for self consistent values of surface charge and potential at all separations for any given set of bulk parameters. It is a general treatment that replaces constant charge and constant potential assumptions and is applicable to oxide colloids and amphoteric biosurfaces in particular.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Surface ionization and complexation at the oxide/water interface

TL;DR: In this article, a method for determination of intrinsic ionization and complexation constants of oxide surface sites from potentiometric titration data is reported using these experimental properties and the stoichiometry of surface reactions, surface charge, σo, adsorption density, Γi, and diffuse layer potentials, ψd, at the oxide/water interface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling ionic strength effects on cation adsorption at hydrous oxide/solution interfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of changes in ionic strength on the adsorption behavior of selenite and selenate on goethite and hydrous ferric oxide have been modeled using a generalized version of the triple-layer surface complexation model.
Journal ArticleDOI

The charge of glass and silica surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a method of calculating the electric charge density of glass and silica surfaces in contact with aqueous electrolytes for two cases of practical relevance that are not amenable to standard techniques: surfaces of low specific area at low ionic strength and surfaces interacting strongly with another anionic surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Charge of Glass and Silica Surfaces

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a method of calculating the electric charge density of glass and silica surfaces in contact with aqueous electrolytes for two cases of practical relevance that are not amenable to standard techniques: surfaces of low specific area at low ionic strength and surfaces interacting strongly with another anionic surface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Semiconductor Photocatalysis—Mechanistic and Synthetic Aspects

TL;DR: Novel atom-economic C-C and C-N coupling reactions illustrate the relevance of semiconductor photocatalysis for organic synthesis, and demonstrate that the multidisciplinary field combines classical photochemistry with electrochemistry, solid-state chemistry, and heterogeneous catalysis.
References
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Book

A Course of Modern Analysis

TL;DR: The volume now gives a somewhat exhaustive account of the various ramifications of the subject, which are set out in an attractive manner and should become indispensable, not only as a textbook for advanced students, but as a work of reference to those whose aim is to extend the knowledge of analysis.
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