On the evolution of the exclusion zone produced by hydrophilic surfaces: A contracted description

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Abstract

After exciting scientific debates about its nature, the development of the exclusion zone, a region near hydrophilic surfaces from which charged colloidal particles are strongly expelled, has been finally traced back to the diffusiophoresis produced by unbalanced ion gradients. This was done by numerically solving the coupled Poisson equation for electrostatics, the two stationary Stokes equations for low Reynolds numbers in incompressible fluids, and the Nernst-Planck equation for mass transport. Recently, it has also been claimed that the leading mechanism behind the diffusiophoretic phenomenon is electrophoresis [Esplandiu et al., Soft Matter 16, 3717 (2020)]. In this paper, we analyze the evolution of the exclusion zone based on a one-component interaction model at the Langevin equation level, which leads to simple analytical expressions instead of the complex numerical scheme of previous works, yet being consistent with it. We manage to reproduce the evolution of the exclusion zone width and the mean-square displacements of colloidal particles we measure near Nafion, a perfluorinated polymer membrane material, along with all characteristic time regimes, in a unified way. Our findings are also strongly supported by complementary experiments using two parallel planar conductors kept at a fixed voltage, mimicking the hydrophilic surfaces, and some computer simulations.

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Mercado-Uribe, H., Guevara-Pantoja, F. J., García-Muñoz, W., García-Maldonado, J. S., Méndez-Alcaraz, J. M., & Ruiz-Suárez, J. C. (2021). On the evolution of the exclusion zone produced by hydrophilic surfaces: A contracted description. Journal of Chemical Physics, 154(19). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0043084

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