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Solid-liquid interface, soluble polymer adsorption

The adsorption of soluble polymers at solid-liquid interfaces is a highly complex phenomenon with vast numbers of possible configurations of the molecules at the surface. Previous analyses of polymer adsorption have ranged in sophistication from very simple applications of "standard" models derived for small molecules, to detailed statistical mechanical treatments of the process. [Pg.23]

Alternatively, several workers have shown that not only is the soluble, zero-charged hydrolysis product considerably more surface active than the free (aquo) ion but also a polymeric charged or uncharged hydrolysis product may be formed at the solid-liquid interface at conditions well below saturation or precipitation in solution. Hall (5) has considered the coagulation of kaolinite by aluminum (III) and concluded that surface precipitates related to hydrated aluminum hydroxide control the adsorption-coagulation behavior. Similarly Healy and Jellett (6) have postulated that the polymeric, soluble, uncharged Zn(OH)2 polymer can be nucleated catalytically at ZnO-H20 interfaces and will flocculate the colloidal ZnO via a bridging mechanism. [Pg.71]


See other pages where Solid-liquid interface, soluble polymer adsorption is mentioned: [Pg.252]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.244]    [Pg.370]    [Pg.742]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.48]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.23 , Pg.35 ]




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Adsorption interface

Adsorption, polymer interfaces

Interfaces, polymer

Liquid adsorption

Liquid solubility

Liquid-solid interface, soluble

Polymer adsorption

Polymer-solid interface

Polymers solubility

Solid Interface

Solid adsorption

Solid-liquid interface

Solid-liquid interface, adsorption

Soluble polymers

Soluble solids

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