Page 41 - Introduction to Colloid and Surface Chemistry
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32  Kinetic properties


        Dynamic  light scattering (see page 61)
        The ultracentrifuge

        There  are  a  number  of  experimental  techniques  (for example,  the
                                        29
        Wiegner tube and the Oden balance)  which make use of sedimenta-
        tion  under  gravity  for  fractionating  or  determining  particle-size
        distributions  in  systems  that  contain  relatively  coarse  suspended
        material  such  as  soils  and  pigments.  A  popular  method  of carrying
        out a cumulative sedimentation  size analysis is the balance method,  in
        which  the  weight  of  particles  settling  out  on  to  a  balance  pan  is
        recorded  as  a  function  of  time.  Sedimentation  under  gravity  has  a
        practical lower limit of c. 1 /xm. Smaller (colloidal) particles sediment

        Table 2.2  Sedimentation  rates under gravity for uncharged spheres  of density 2 g cm" 1
        in water  at  20°C, calculated  from  Stokes' law
        Radius                                 Sedimentation  rate

            9
                                                  12
                                                                  1
        1(T  m  (1 nm)                   2.2 x  1<T  m s" 1  (8 nm h' )
            8                                           1          1
         10~  m (10 nm)                  2.2 x lO^ms"  (0.8/Amh" )
                                                                  1
           7
                                                  8
         Kr m(100nm)                     2.2 x  KT  m s" 1  (80//.m  h" )
                                                        1
             6
                                                                  1
         lQ~ m(l^m)                      2.2 x  lO^ms"  (8 mm h" )
                                                  4
                                                        1
            5
                                                                  1
        10~  m (10 /am)                  2.2  x  10~  m s"  (0.8 m h" )
        so  slowly  under  gravity that  the  effect  is obliterated  by  the  mixing
        tendencies  of  diffusion  and  convection.
          By employing centrifugal forces  instead  of gravity, the  application
        of  sedimentation  can  be extended  to  the  study  of colloidal  systems,
        and  has  been  used,  in  particular,  for  the  characterisation  of
        substances  of  biological  origin,  such  as  proteins,  nucleic  acids  and
              30 31
        viruses " .  The  driving  force  on  a suspended  molecule  or  particle
                              2
        then becomes m(l—vp)o> jt, where «is the angular velocity and x the
        distance  of the  particle  from  the  axis of  rotation.
          An  ultracentrifuge  is  a  high-speed  centrifuge  equipped  with  a
        suitable  optical  system  (usually schlieren or  interference  optics,  the
        latter being particularly useful when low concentrations  are involved)
        for  recording  sedimentation  behaviour and with facilities for eliminating
        the  disturbing effects of convection  currents  and vibration.  The  sample
        is  contained  in  a  sector-shaped  cell  mounted  in  a  rotor  (usually c.
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