On the ac Measurements of the Electrical Conductivity of Dilute Colloidal Electrolytes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The validity of Equation (1) implicitly requires the uniformity (lack of dispersion) of individual characteristics of inclusions. The methods of preparation of dilute colloidal electrolytes containing maghemite nanoparticles in Refs. [10,11,12,13] allow the monitoring of the quality of this component with good accuracy and the control of the fulfillment of the requirement . This is a qualitative difference of the studies [10,11,12,13] from most of the transport experiments with the suspensions prepared mechanically (see, for example, reviews [14,15]).
- In all experiments of Refs. [10,11,12,13,14,15], the linear change of conductivity versus relative volume occupied by the inclusions is observed in the region . This characteristic feature gives grounds to use the Maxwell theory in the interpretation of the transport properties of various suspensions (see Figure 1 (taken from Ref. [12]) and the corresponding caption).Yet, it is necessary to attract attention to the fact that, in the most of such successful linear fittings of the observed , the slope of this dependence dramatically exceeds that of the one allowed by the Maxwell theory. Indeed, the maximal slope of the linear approximation of Equation (1) is reached when and it is equal to while in the measurements of different years for mechanically prepared suspensions, it exceeds this theoretical limit by three orders: for example, in suspension aluminum/water, this value reaches [16]. This is an overwhelming inconsistency which indicates the inapplicability of Maxwell’s formalism to explain the cited experiments.The lack of consistency is also deepened by the available data for obviously dielectric suspensions (see Ref. [17]). Namely, the conductivity of coats in nanoparticles (fumed silica) in ethylene glycol is less than the conductivity of the alcohol ( nanoparticles are good dielectrics). As a consequence, the expected effect of such powder inclusions on the conductivity of ethylene, where it is added, should be negative. Yet, as we see, the corresponding effect is positive (see Figure 2).A similar situation takes place in suspensions containing nanotubes. Namely, in aqueous suspension of nanotubes [18] an increase in the conductivity of the suspension is observed, although carbon nanotubes are wide-gap semiconductors. At room temperature, their conductive properties are similar to those of classical dielectrics; hence, the influence of such additives on the effective conductivity of the suspension should be negative.In this relation, let us stress the striking difference in conductivity values in experiments with mechanical suspensions [16,17] and electrolytes containing magnetic nanoparticles [12]. Thus, in the paper [17], conductivity S/cm, while in the case of electrolytes [12], this value turns out to be four orders greater: S/cm.
- An important “mark of distinction” which illustrates the applicability of the Maxwell theory to the suspension of stabilized solutions is the non-linearity of in the region . According to Refs. [1,2,3], the behavior of in this region loses its linearity, demonstrating the systematic deviation of the observed values of conductivity above the linear increase. At the same time, the data of Ref. [10] demonstrate the reverse trend in this region: the conductivity at high enough concentrations deviates below the linear asymptotic. The reasons of this discrepancy require special attention and will be discussed below (see Section 2).
- Ionic liquids. The paper [13] reported the structural and transport properties of the dilute solutions of maghemite nanoparticles in ionic liquids Ethylammonium nitrate. To elucidate the role of the solvent (water or ionic liquid) in the properties of dilute electrolytes, it is useful to compare what happens with maghemite nanoparticles in ionic liquids and aqueous stabilizing electrolytes.
2. ac Impedance Diagnostics
3. The Applicability of the Maxwell Model for Ionic Liquid Dilute Suspension
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Chikina, I.; Nakamae, S.; Varlamov, A. On the ac Measurements of the Electrical Conductivity of Dilute Colloidal Electrolytes. Colloids Interfaces 2023, 7, 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids7030058
Chikina I, Nakamae S, Varlamov A. On the ac Measurements of the Electrical Conductivity of Dilute Colloidal Electrolytes. Colloids and Interfaces. 2023; 7(3):58. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids7030058
Chicago/Turabian StyleChikina, Ioulia, Sawako Nakamae, and Andrey Varlamov. 2023. "On the ac Measurements of the Electrical Conductivity of Dilute Colloidal Electrolytes" Colloids and Interfaces 7, no. 3: 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids7030058
APA StyleChikina, I., Nakamae, S., & Varlamov, A. (2023). On the ac Measurements of the Electrical Conductivity of Dilute Colloidal Electrolytes. Colloids and Interfaces, 7(3), 58. https://doi.org/10.3390/colloids7030058