Abstract

The radiowave dielectric properties of aqueous heterogeneous systems during the complexation of charged polyions and oppositely charged liposomal particles have been measured in a wide frequency range, between 100 Hz and 2 GHz. The formation of a polyion-liposome complex driven by the correlated polyion adsorption at the particle surface implies two concomitant effects referred to as reentrant condensation and charge inversion. Both of them are governed by electrostatic interactions and there is now strong evidence, based on experiments and simulations, that counterion release is the driving force of the aggregation process. From this point of view, dielectric technique may offer a suitable tool in the investigation of the structural properties of these aggregates. In spite of the fact that interaction of polyions with oppositely charged surfaces was extensively experimentally investigated, there are no papers concerning the dielectric properties during the polyion-induced aggregation. To get an insight into this important topic, the authors present here an extensive set of radiowave dielectric measurements of liposomal vesicle aqueous suspensions where the liposome aggregation was induced by an oppositely charged polyion. The aggregation was followed from the beginning, when most of the isolated liposomes predominate, up to the formation of polyion-coated liposomes of inverted charge, crossing the isoelectric condition, where large, almost neutral, aggregates appear. The authors describe the observed dielectric dispersions as due to counterion polarization in the adjacency of the liposome and liposome aggregate surface, primarily governed by the zeta potential, according to the standard electrokinetic model.

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