Electroanalytical Chemistry. Gary A. Mabbott
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Electroanalytical Chemistry - Gary A. Mabbott страница 15

Название: Electroanalytical Chemistry

Автор: Gary A. Mabbott

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Химия

Серия:

isbn: 9781119538585

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ adsorption [5].

(a) Gouy–Chapman model of electrical double layer showing a diffuse region of excess charge on the solution side. (b) The excess concentration drops off exponentially with distance from the electrode surface.

      (1.20)equation

Stern model of the electrical double layer. The electrical double layer plays an important role in the suspension or sedimentation of tiny particles, such as clay platelets.

      Source: Adapted with permission from Zhu et al. [17]. Copyright 2019, Elsevier.

      Seawater and soil particles are complicated mixtures and multiple mechanisms for binding particles together have been described. In some cases, calcium and other di‐ or tri‐valent cations can bridge between adjacent particles [10]. Another mechanism has been exploited in water treatment and industrial applications of clay materials. Water soluble, neutral polymers, such as polysaccharide chains, are added to clay suspensions in industrial processes to bridge between particles by hydrogen bonding to oxygen atoms in the clay surface [11]. Polymers that attach at several points but still loop out into the solution appear to work best. Presumably, the loops in the chains extend far enough to reach across the electric double layer of neighboring particles. The compression of the electrical double layer is a key part of the mechanism in both industrial and natural processes. As these particles agglomerate at the mouth of rivers, they settle out of solution‐carrying nutrients, and sometimes pollutants, into the sediments. This process has very important implications for the ecology of estuaries and the biological productivity of marine environments [12].

      1.4.2 The Relationship Between Double Layer Charge and the Potential at the Electrode Interface