Issue 10, 2024

Kinetic trapping of nanoparticles by solvent-induced interactions

Abstract

Theoretical analysis based on mean field theory indicates that solvent-induced interactions (i.e. structural forces due to the rearrangement of wetting solvent molecules) not considered in DLVO theory can induce the kinetic trapping of nanoparticles at finite nanoscale separations from a well-wetted surface, under a range of ubiquitous physicochemical conditions for inorganic nanoparticles of common materials (e.g., metal oxides) in water or simple molecular solvents. This work proposes a simple analytical model that is applicable to arbitrary materials and simple solvents to determine the conditions for direct particle–surface contact or kinetic trapping at finite separations, by using experimentally measurable properties (e.g., Hamaker constants, interfacial free energies, and nanoparticle size) as input parameters. Analytical predictions of the proposed model are verified by molecular dynamics simulations and numerical solution of the Smoluchowski diffusion equation.

Graphical abstract: Kinetic trapping of nanoparticles by solvent-induced interactions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
18 Dec 2023
Accepted
12 Feb 2024
First published
13 Feb 2024

Nanoscale, 2024,16, 5374-5382

Kinetic trapping of nanoparticles by solvent-induced interactions

T. Singletary, G. Drazer, A. C. Marschilok, E. S. Takeuchi, K. J. Takeuchi and C. E. Colosqui, Nanoscale, 2024, 16, 5374 DOI: 10.1039/D3NR06469G

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