Viscosity and transient electric birefringence study of clay colloidal aggregation

We study a synthetic clay suspension of laponite at different particle and NaCl concentrations by measuring stationary shear viscosity and transient electrically induced birefringence (TEB). On one hand the viscosity data are consistent with the particles being spheres and the particles being associ...

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Published inPhysical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics Vol. 65; no. 2 Pt 1; p. 021407
Main Authors Bakk, Audun, Fossum, Jon O, da Silva, Geraldo J, Adland, Hans M, Mikkelsen, Arne, Elgsaeter, Arnljot
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.02.2002
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Summary:We study a synthetic clay suspension of laponite at different particle and NaCl concentrations by measuring stationary shear viscosity and transient electrically induced birefringence (TEB). On one hand the viscosity data are consistent with the particles being spheres and the particles being associated with large amount bound water. On the other hand the viscosity data are also consistent with the particles being asymmetric, consistent with single laponite platelets associated with a very few monolayers of water. We analyze the TEB data by employing two different models of aggregate size (effective hydrodynamic radius) distribution: (1) bidisperse model and (2) log-normal distributed model. Both models fit, in the same manner, fairly well to the experimental TEB data and they indicate that the suspension consists of polydisperse particles. The models also appear to confirm that the aggregates increase in size vs increasing ionic strength. The smallest particles at low salt concentrations seem to be monomers and oligomers.
ISSN:1539-3755
1550-2376
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevE.65.021407