Abstract

We report results from complementary electrokinetic measurements—dielectric relaxation and electrophoretic mobility—undertaken to test the applicability of the standard electrokinetic theory with a model system. Dielectric spectra were obtained at frequencies between 1 kHz and 40 MHz with a new, two-electrode cell design [Hollingsworth and Saville, J. Colloid Interface Sci. 257 (2003) 65–76]; mobility data were acquired with an electrophoretic light scattering instrument. Data from the two-electrode cell were collected at different electrode separations and interpreted with newly developed procedures to remove the influence of electrode polarization. Methodology A employs extrapolation to infinite electrode separation to compute the dielectric constant and conductivity as functions of frequency. The contributions from suspended particles are reported in terms of dielectric constant and conductivity increments. Methodology B uses a theoretical model of electrode polarization and the standard electrokinetic model in a nonlinear regression scheme. Results are presented in several forms: frequency-dependent dielectric constant and conductivity increments, frequency-dependent dielectric constants and conductivities, and the complex dipole coefficient. It is shown that the standard model provides a consistent methodology for interpreting particle behavior; ζ-potentials inferred from mobility and dielectric relaxation agree to within experimental error. Moreover, the cell design and interpretation are straightforward and provide relatively simple ways to obtain complementary measurements over a wide frequency range. The results unambiguously show that electrokinetic character of this dispersion follows the standard model.

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