Particles and solutes are excluded from the vicinity of hydrophilic surfaces, leaving large microsphere-free regions known as exclusion zones (EZs). Prior work had indicated that EZs could extend to distances of up to several hundred micrometers from the nucleating surface. These observations were made on large, extended surfaces, leaving open the question whether EZ size might depend on the characteristic dimension of the excluding surface. We placed one or few ion-exchange-resin beads whose diameters varied from 15 ?m to 300 ?m in cuvettes. The beads were suffused with aqueous microsphere suspensions for observing the surfaces' exclusionary behavior. Results showed a direct relation between bead size and EZ size over the full range of bead diameter, implying a similar relation for smaller particles or molecules, perhaps extending beyond the resolution of the light microscope. © 2011 WIT Press.
CITATION STYLE
Nhan, D. T., & Pollack, G. H. (2011). Effect of particle diameter on exclusion-zone size. International Journal of Design and Nature and Ecodynamics, 6(2), 139–144. https://doi.org/10.2495/DNE-V6-N2-139-144
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