Abstract

ZetaSpin determines zeta potential by measuring the streaming potential generated by rotating a disk-shaped sample about its axis while submerged in the liquid. The apparatus and procedure developed for ZetaSpin in aqueous solutions was adapted for use in highly nonpolar fluids like surfactant-doped alkanes. Perhaps most unexpected is the need for up to 10 min (instead of a fraction of one second for aqueous solutions) for the electrometer to display changes in streaming potential in response to changes in rotation speed. Four tests (suggested by theory) confirm that the potential finally reported by the electrometer was indeed the streaming potential. Compared to electrophoresis, ZetaSpin does not require a value for the Debye length, avoids the complication caused by the electric-field-dependence of electrophoretic mobility and can be used with planar samples as well as colloidal particles.

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