When placed in an ionic surfactant gradient, charged colloids will undergo diffusiophoresis at a velocity, = ∇ ln , where is the diffusiophoretic mobility and is the surfactant concentration. The diffusiophoretic mobility depends in part on the charges and diffusivities of the surfactants and their counterions. Since micellization decreases surfactant diffusivity and alters charge distributions in a surfactant solution, of charged colloids in ionic surfactant gradients may differ significantly when surfactant concentrations are above or below the critical micelle concentration (CMC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypothesis: Surface tension gradient driven Marangoni flows originating from multiple sources are important to many industrial and medical applications, but the theoretical literature focuses on single surfactant sources. Understanding how two spreading surfactant sources interact allows insights from single source experiments to be applied to multi-source applications. Two key features of multi-source spreading - source translation and source deformation - can be explained by transport modeling of a two-source system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypothesis: A concentration gradient of surfactants in the presence of polymers that non-covalently associate with surfactants will exhibit a continually varying distribution of complexes with different composition, charge, and size. Since diffusiophoresis of colloids suspended in a solute concentration gradient depends on the relaxation of the gradient and on the interactions between solutes and particles, polymer/surfactant complexation will alter the rate of diffusiophoresis driven by surfactant gradients relative to that observed in the same concentration gradient in the absence of polymers.
Experiments: A microfluidic device was used to measure diffusiophoresis of colloids suspended in solutions containing a gradient of sodium dodecylsulfate (SDS) in the presence or absence of a uniform concentration of Pluronic P123 poly(ethylene oxide-b-propylene oxide-b-ethylene oxide) nonionic triblock copolymers.
J Colloid Interface Sci
October 2022
Hypothesis: Marangoni spreading driven by localized surfactant solution deposition previously has been studied only for single surfactant systems. For binary surfactant mixtures, interactions that generate surface tension synergism, a thermodynamic effect, may also synergistically enhance Marangoni spreading dynamics, introducing the concept of Marangoni synergism. Spreading dynamics and possible Marangoni synergism should depend not only on thermodynamic properties but also kinetic properties of the binary system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transport of microorganisms by chemotaxis is described by the same "log-sensing" response as colloids undergoing diffusiophoresis, despite their different mechanistic origins. We employ a recently-developed macrotransport theory to analyze the advective-diffusive transport of a chemotactic or diffusiophoretic colloidal species (both referred to as "colloids") in a circular tube under a steady pressure-driven flow (referred to as hydrodynamic flow) and transient solute gradient. First, we derive an exact solution to the log-sensing chemotactic/diffusiophoretic macrotransport equation.
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