Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Repulsive force repulsion

Probably, the preponderance of the U shape of XXX is a delicate balance between the repulsive forces (repulsion of the nuclei and the lone pairs) and attractive forces pn—fn interaction and Pa—Qd or 4s interaction). [Pg.83]

Debye-Hiickel theory The activity coefficient of an electrolyte depends markedly upon concentration. Jn dilute solutions, due to the Coulombic forces of attraction and repulsion, the ions tend to surround themselves with an atmosphere of oppositely charged ions. Debye and Hiickel showed that it was possible to explain the abnormal activity coefficients at least for very dilute solutions of electrolytes. [Pg.125]

Madeluag constant For an ionic crystal composed of cations and anions of respective change z + and z, the la ttice energy Vq may be derived as the balance between the coulombic attractive and repulsive forces. This approach yields the Born-Lande equation,... [Pg.245]

The equation of state for an ideal gas, that is a gas in which the volume of the gas molecules is insignificant, attractive and repulsive forces between molecules are ignored, and molecules maintain their energy when they collide with each other. [Pg.105]

Fig. V-5. The repulsive force between crossed cylinders of radius R (1 cm) covered with mica and immersed in propylene carbonate solutions of tetraethylammonium bromide at the indicated concentrations. The dotted lines are from double-layer theory (From Ref. 51). Fig. V-5. The repulsive force between crossed cylinders of radius R (1 cm) covered with mica and immersed in propylene carbonate solutions of tetraethylammonium bromide at the indicated concentrations. The dotted lines are from double-layer theory (From Ref. 51).
A major advance in force measurement was the development by Tabor, Win-terton and Israelachvili of a surface force apparatus (SFA) involving crossed cylinders coated with molecularly smooth cleaved mica sheets [11, 28]. A current version of an apparatus is shown in Fig. VI-4 from Ref. 29. The separation between surfaces is measured interferometrically to a precision of 0.1 nm the surfaces are driven together with piezoelectric transducers. The combination of a stiff double-cantilever spring with one of a number of measuring leaf springs provides force resolution down to 10 dyn (10 N). Since its development, several groups have used the SFA to measure the retarded and unretarded dispersion forces, electrostatic repulsions in a variety of electrolytes, structural and solvation forces (see below), and numerous studies of polymeric and biological systems. [Pg.236]

Fig. VI-7. The force between two crossed mica cylinders in dry OMCTS. The cylinder radii R were about 1 cm. The dashed lines show the presumed, experimentally inaccessible, transition between a repulsive maximum and an attractive minimum. (From Ref. 68.)... Fig. VI-7. The force between two crossed mica cylinders in dry OMCTS. The cylinder radii R were about 1 cm. The dashed lines show the presumed, experimentally inaccessible, transition between a repulsive maximum and an attractive minimum. (From Ref. 68.)...
Klein and co-workers have documented the remarkable lubricating attributes of polymer brushes tethered to surfaces by one end only [56], Studying zwitterionic polystyrene-X attached to mica by the zwitterion end group in a surface forces apparatus, they found /i < 0.001 for loads of 100 and speeds of 15-450 nm/sec. They attributed the low friction to strong repulsions existing between such polymer layers. At higher compression, stick-slip motion was observed. In a related study, they compared the friction between polymer brushes in toluene (ji < 0.005) to that of mica in pure toluene /t = 0.7 [57]. [Pg.447]

The interest in vesicles as models for cell biomembranes has led to much work on the interactions within and between lipid layers. The primary contributions to vesicle stability and curvature include those familiar to us already, the electrostatic interactions between charged head groups (Chapter V) and the van der Waals interaction between layers (Chapter VI). An additional force due to thermal fluctuations in membranes produces a steric repulsion between membranes known as the Helfrich or undulation interaction. This force has been quantified by Sackmann and co-workers using reflection interference contrast microscopy to monitor vesicles weakly adhering to a solid substrate [78]. Membrane fluctuation forces may influence the interactions between proteins embedded in them [79]. Finally, in balance with these forces, bending elasticity helps determine shape transitions [80], interactions between inclusions [81], aggregation of membrane junctions [82], and unbinding of pinched membranes [83]. Specific interactions between membrane embedded receptors add an additional complication to biomembrane behavior. These have been stud-... [Pg.549]

Such attractive forces are relatively weak in comparison to chemisorption energies, and it appears that in chemisorption, repulsion effects may be more important. These can be of two kinds. First, there may be a short-range repulsion affecting nearest-neighbor molecules only, as if the spacing between sites is uncomfortably small for the adsorbate species. A repulsion between the electron clouds of adjacent adsorbed molecules would then give rise to a short-range repulsion, usually represented by an exponential term of the type employed... [Pg.700]

The existence of intennolecular interactions is apparent from elementary experimental observations. There must be attractive forces because otherwise condensed phases would not fomi, gases would not liquefy, and liquids would not solidify. There must be short-range repulsive interactions because otherwise solids and liquids could be compressed to much smaller volumes with ease. The kernel of these notions was fomuilated in the late eighteenth century, and Clausius made a clear statement along the lines of this paragraph as early as 1857 [1]. [Pg.184]

There are tliree important varieties of long-range forces electrostatic, induction and dispersion. Electrostatic forces are due to classical Coulombic interactions between the static charge distributions of the two molecules. They are strictly pairwise additive, highly anisotropic, and can be either repulsive or attractive. [Pg.185]

Weeks J, Chandler D and Anderson H C 1971 Role of repulsive forces in determining the equilibrium structure of simple liquids J. Chem. Phys. 54 5237... [Pg.555]

Weeks J D, Katsov K and Vollmayr K 1998 Roles of repulsive and attractive forces in determining the structure of non uniform liquids generalized mean field theory Phys. Rev. Lett. 81 4400... [Pg.556]

Figure A3.1.1. Typical pair potentials. Illustrated here are the Lennard-Jones potential, and the Weeks-Chandler- Anderson potential, which gives the same repulsive force as the Leimard-Jones potential. Figure A3.1.1. Typical pair potentials. Illustrated here are the Lennard-Jones potential, and the Weeks-Chandler- Anderson potential, which gives the same repulsive force as the Leimard-Jones potential.
The simple difhision model of the cage effect again can be improved by taking effects of the local solvent structure, i.e. hydrodynamic repulsion, into account in the same way as discussed above for bimolecular reactions. The consequence is that the potential of mean force tends to favour escape at larger distances > 1,5R) more than it enliances caging at small distances, leading to larger overall photodissociation quantum yields [H6, 117]. [Pg.862]

The van der Waals attraction arises from tlie interaction between instantaneous charge fluctuations m the molecule and surface. The molecule interacts with the surface as a whole. In contrast the repulsive forces are more short-range, localized to just a few surface atoms. The repulsion is, therefore, not homogeneous but depends on the point of impact in the surface plane, that is, the surface is corrugated. [Pg.901]

As the tip is brought towards the surface, there are several forces acting on it. Firstly, there is the spring force due to die cantilever, F, which is given by = -Icz. Secondly, there are the sample forces, which, in the case of AFM, may comprise any number of interactions including (generally attractive) van der Waals forces, chemical bonding interactions, meniscus forces or Bom ( hard-sphere ) repulsion forces. The total force... [Pg.1695]

The well defined contact geometry and the ionic structure of the mica surface favours observation of structural and solvation forces. Besides a monotonic entropic repulsion one may observe superimposed periodic force modulations. It is commonly believed that these modulations are due to a metastable layering at surface separations below some 3-10 molecular diameters. These diflftise layers are very difficult to observe with other teclmiques [92]. The periodicity of these oscillatory forces is regularly found to correspond to the characteristic molecular diameter. Figure Bl.20.7 shows a typical measurement of solvation forces in the case of ethanol between mica. [Pg.1739]

Figure Bl.20.8. DLVO-type forces measured between two silica glass surfaces in aqueous solutions of NaCl at various concentrations. The inset shows the same data in the short-range regime up to D = 10 mn. The repulsive deviation at short range (<2 nm) is due to a monotonic solvation force, which seems not to depend on the salt concentration. Oscillatory surface forces are not observed. With pemiission from [73]. Figure Bl.20.8. DLVO-type forces measured between two silica glass surfaces in aqueous solutions of NaCl at various concentrations. The inset shows the same data in the short-range regime up to D = 10 mn. The repulsive deviation at short range (<2 nm) is due to a monotonic solvation force, which seems not to depend on the salt concentration. Oscillatory surface forces are not observed. With pemiission from [73].
Israelachvili J N and Pashley R M 1983 Molecular layering of water at surfaces and origin of repulsive hydration forces Nature 306 249-50... [Pg.1749]


See other pages where Repulsive force repulsion is mentioned: [Pg.135]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.381]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.244]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.522]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.437]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.503]    [Pg.676]    [Pg.861]    [Pg.901]    [Pg.1321]    [Pg.1692]    [Pg.1696]    [Pg.1710]    [Pg.1715]    [Pg.1739]    [Pg.1740]    [Pg.2382]    [Pg.2470]    [Pg.2470]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.99 , Pg.100 , Pg.101 , Pg.102 , Pg.103 , Pg.116 , Pg.117 , Pg.1011 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.99 , Pg.100 , Pg.101 , Pg.102 , Pg.103 , Pg.116 , Pg.117 ]




SEARCH



Attraction and repulsion forces

Born repulsive forces

Coagulation repulsive force

Colloid hydration repulsive force

Colloid repulsive forces

Colloidal interactions repulsive steric forces

Coulomb repulsion force

Coulombic repulsion force

Double-layer repulsion forces

Electric Attraction and Repulsion Forces

Electric double layer electrostatic repulsive force

Electrical double-layer repulsion forces

Electrical force repulsion

Electrostatic force of repulsion

Electrostatic repulsion forces

Electrostatic repulsive force between charged particles

Electrostatic, double layer repulsion forces

Emulsion repulsive forces between droplets

Excluded volume forces chain repulsion

Forces, attractive repulsive

Interlayer repulsion forces

Intermolecular forces repulsive

Lipid bilayer repulsive forces

Long range repulsive forces

Modeling Born repulsive and van der Waals forces

Molecular interactions Born repulsive forces

Pauli repulsive forces

Poly brushes repulsion forces

Potential Functions and Repulsive Forces

Proton repulsive electrostatic force among

Repulsing forces

Repulsing forces

Repulsion force

Repulsion force

Repulsion force, electric

Repulsion force, electrostatic model

Repulsion forces, electrostatic polymeric

Repulsive atomic forces

Repulsive charge forces

Repulsive double-layer force

Repulsive elastic force

Repulsive electrostatic forces

Repulsive force definition

Repulsive force valence shell electron pair

Repulsive force, between electrons

Repulsive force, electrical double layers

Repulsive force, polysaccharides

Repulsive forces

Repulsive forces

Repulsive forces in thin liquid films

Repulsive forces steric

Repulsive forces, ligand binding

Repulsive hydration force

Short-range repulsive forces

Sphere electrostatic repulsive force between

The repulsive force

Thin liquid films, repulsive forces

Torsional repulsion forces

Van der Waals forces repulsive

© 2024 chempedia.info