Issue 39, 2023

Electrostatic force on a spherical particle confined between two planar surfaces

Abstract

A charge-free particle in a uniform electric field experiences no net force in an unbounded domain. A boundary, however, breaks the symmetry and the particle can be attracted or repelled to it, depending on the applied field direction [Z. Wang et al., Phys. Rev. E, 2022, 106, 034607]. Here, we investigate the effect of a second boundary because of its common occurrence in practical applications. We consider a spherical particle suspended between two parallel walls and subjected to a uniform electric field, applied in a direction either normal or tangential to the surfaces. All media are modeled as leaky dielectrics, thus allowing for the accumulation of free charge at interfaces, while bulk media remain charge-free. The Laplace equation for the electric potential is solved using a multipole expansion and the boundaries are accounted for by a set of images. The results show that in the case of a normal electric field, which corresponds to a particle between two electrodes, the force is always attractive to the nearer boundary and, in general, weaker that the case of only one wall. Intriguingly, for a given particle–wall separation we find that the force may vary nonmonotonically with confinement and its magnitude may exceed the one-wall value. In the case of tangential electric field, which corresponds to a particle between insulating boundaries, the force follows the same trends but it is always repulsive.

Graphical abstract: Electrostatic force on a spherical particle confined between two planar surfaces

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Jul 2023
Accepted
13 Sep 2023
First published
19 Sep 2023

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 7663-7672

Electrostatic force on a spherical particle confined between two planar surfaces

Z. Wang, M. J. Miksis and P. M. Vlahovska, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 7663 DOI: 10.1039/D3SM00934C

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