scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of shape on the interaction of colloidal particles

Lars Onsager
- 01 May 1949 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 4, pp 627-659
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, it was shown that colloids in general are apt to exhibit considerable deviations from Raoult's law and that crystalline phases retaining a fair proportion of solvent may separate from concentrated solutions.
Abstract
Introdzution. The shapes of colloidal particles are often reasonably compact, so that no diameter greatly exceeds the cube root of the volume of the particle. On the other hand, we know many coiloids whose particles are greatly extended into sheets (bentonite), rods (tobacco virus), or flexible chains (myosin, various Iinear polymers). In some instances, a t least, solutions of such highly anisometric particles are known to exhibit remarkably great deviations from Raoult’s law, even to the extent that an anisotropic phase may separate from a solution in which the particles themselves occupy but one or two per cent of the total volume (tobacco virus, bentonite). We shall show in what follows how such results may arise from electrostatic repulsion between highly anisometric particles. Most colloids in aqueous solution owe their stability more or less to electric charges, so that each particle will repel others before they come into actual contact, and effectively claim for itself a greater volume than what it actuaily occupies. Thus, we can understand that colloids in general are apt to exhibit considerable deviations from Raoult’s law and that crystalline phases retaining a fair proportion of solvent may separate from concentrated solutions. However, if we tentatively increase the known size of the particles by the known range of the electric forces and multiply the resulting volume by four in order to compute the effective van der Waal’s co-volume, we have not nearly enough to explain why a solution of 2 per cent tobacco virus in 0.005 normal NaCZ forms two phases.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Graphene-assembly liquid crystalline and nanopolymer hybridization: A review on switchable device implementations.

TL;DR: Exhibited ultra thin-film nanocomposite based smart switchable devices are promising candidates for diverse applications in the field of stretchable electronics, energy storage, photodetectors, high contrast displays, and optoelectronics.
Journal Article

Spontaneous Patterning of Confined Granular Rods

TL;DR: In this article, a density-dependent isotropic-nematic transition is found in the structure of vertically vibrated rod-shaped granular materials in quasi-2D containers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Liquid crystal phases in the aqueous colloids of size-controlled fluorinated layered clay mineral nanosheets

TL;DR: Size-controlled nanosheet colloids of fluorohectorite and fluortetrasilicic mica were prepared in high yield and their transitions to fluid liquid crystal phases with highly ordered lamellar structures were identified over a wide concentration range, which is a rare case for clay mineral systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hierarchical Amplification of Macromolecular Helicity in a Lyotropic Liquid Crystalline Charged Poly(phenylacetylene) by Nonracemic Dopants in Water and Its Helical Structure

TL;DR: In this paper, a hierarchical amplification of chiral information from a nonracemic guest to macromolecular helicity, followed by a mesoscopic, supramolecular cholesteric twist in water, was reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smectic Nanorod Superlattices Assembled on Liquid Subphases: Structure, Orientation, Defects, and Optical Polarization

TL;DR: In this article, the orientation of smectic B superlattices of CdSe/CdS dot-in-rod nanocrystals through assembly on different polar interfaces and quantifying the super-lattice orientation through correlated small-and wide-angle grazing-incidence diffraction was determined.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Attractive and Repulsive Forces in the Formation of Tactoids, Thixotropic Gels, Protein Crystals and Coacervates

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the Coulomb attraction between the micelles and the oppositely charged ions in the solution gives an excess of attractive force which must be balanced by the dispersive action of thermal agitation and another repulsive force.