Abstract

HypothesisElectrostatics of soft (ion-permeable) (bio)particles (e.g. microorganisms, core/shell colloids) in aqueous electrolytes is commonly formulated by the mean-field Poisson-Boltzmann theory and integration of the charge contributions from electrolyte ions and soft material. However, the effects connected to the size of the electrolyte ions and that of the structural charges carried by the particle, to dielectric decrement and ion-ion correlations on soft interface electrostatics have been so far considered at the margin, despite the limits of the Gouy theory for condensed and/or multivalent electrolytes. ExperimentsAccordingly, we modify herein the Poisson-Boltzmann theory for core/shell (bio)interfaces to include the aforementioned molecular effects considered separately or concomitantly. The formalism is applicable for poorly to highly charged particles in the thin electric double layer regime and to unsymmetrical multivalent electrolytes. FindingsComputational examples of practical interests are discussed with emphasis on how each considered molecular effect or combination thereof affects the interfacial potential distribution depending on size and valence of cations and anions, size of particle charges, length scale of ionic correlations and shell-to-Debye layer thickness ratio. The origins of here-evidenced pseudo-harmonic potential profile and ion size-dependent screening of core/shell particle charges are detailed. In addition, the existence and magnitude of the Donnan potential when reached in the shell layer are shown to depend on the excluded volumes of the electrolyte ions.

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