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Interparticle Repulsion of Microparticles Delivered to a Pendent Drop by an Electric Field
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Interparticle Repulsion of Microparticles Delivered to a Pendent Drop by an Electric Field

Benjamin Lobel, Matthew J. Hobson, Peter M. Ireland, Grant B. Webber, Casey A. Thomas, Haruka Ogino, Syuji Fujii and Erica J. Wanless
Langmuir, Vol.38(2), pp.670-679
2022
PMID: 34968053

Abstract

Chemistry Chemistry, Multidisciplinary Chemistry, Physical Materials Science Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Physical Sciences Science & Technology Technology
We report an unusually large spacing observed between microparticles after delivery to the surface of a pendent water droplet using a DC nonuniform electrostatic field, primarily via dielectrophoresis. The influence of particle properties was investigated using core particles, which were either coated or surface-modified to alter their wettability and conductivity. Particles that exhibited this spacing were both hydrophobic and possessed some dielectric material exposed to the external field, such as a coating or exposed dielectric core. The origin of this behavior is proposed to be the induced dipole-dipole repulsion between particles, which increases with particle size and decreases when the magnitude of the electric field is reduced. When the particles were no longer subjected to an external field, this large interparticle repulsion ceased and the particles settled to the bottom of the droplet under the force of gravity. We derive a simple model to predict this spacing, with the dipole-dipole repulsion balanced against particle weight. The external electric field was calculated using the existing electric field models. The spacing was found to be dependent on particle density and the induced dipole moment as well as the number of particles present on the droplet interface. As the number of particles increased, a decrease in interparticle spacing was observed.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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#6 Clean Water and Sanitation

Source: InCites

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
2 Chemistry
2.160 Microfluidic Devices & Superhydrophobicity
2.160.365 Superhydrophobic
Web Of Science research areas
Chemistry, Multidisciplinary
Chemistry, Physical
Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
ESI research areas
Chemistry
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