Title of article :
Towards an understanding of induced-charge electrokinetics at large applied voltages in concentrated solutions
Author/Authors :
Bazant، نويسنده , , Martin Z. and Kilic، نويسنده , , Mustafa Sabri and Storey، نويسنده , , Brian D. and Ajdari، نويسنده , , Armand، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
41
From page :
48
To page :
88
Abstract :
The venerable theory of electrokinetic phenomena rests on the hypothesis of a dilute solution of point-like ions in quasi-equilibrium with a weakly charged surface, whose potential relative to the bulk is of order the thermal voltage (kT/e ≈ 25 mV at room temperature). In nonlinear electrokinetic phenomena, such as AC or induced-charge electro-osmosis (ACEO, ICEO) and induced-charge electrophoresis (ICEP), several V ≈ 100 kT/e are applied to polarizable surfaces in microscopic geometries, and the resulting electric fields and induced surface charges are large enough to violate the assumptions of the classical theory. In this article, we review the experimental and theoretical literatures, highlight discrepancies between theory and experiment, introduce possible modifications of the theory, and analyze their consequences. We argue that, in response to a large applied voltage, the “compact layer” and “shear plane” effectively advance into the liquid, due to the crowding of counterions. Using simple continuum models, we predict two general trends at large voltages: (i) ionic crowding against a blocking surface expands the diffuse double layer and thus decreases its differential capacitance, and (ii) a charge-induced viscosity increase near the surface reduces the electro-osmotic mobility; each trend is enhanced by dielectric saturation. The first effect is able to predict high-frequency flow reversal in ACEO pumps, while the second may explain the decay of ICEO flow with increasing salt concentration. Through several colloidal examples, such as ICEP of an uncharged metal sphere in an asymmetric electrolyte, we show that nonlinear electrokinetic phenomena are generally ion-specific. Similar theoretical issues arise in nanofluidics (due to confinement) and ionic liquids (due to the lack of solvent), so the paper concludes with a general framework of modified electrokinetic equations for finite-sized ions.
Keywords :
electrophoresis , Induced-charge electro-osmosis , Microfluidics , AC electro-osmosis , Modified Poisson–Boltzmann theory , Steric effects , Hard-sphere liquid , Lattice-gas , Solvation , Viscoelectric effect , Ionic liquids , Non-equilibrium thermodynamics , Nonlinear electrokinetics , Concentrated solution
Journal title :
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science
Record number :
1432230
Link To Document :
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