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Colloidal electroconvection in a thin horizontal cell: II.
Bulk electroconvection of water during parallel-plate electrolysis
Yilong Han [1] and David G. Grier [2]
[1] Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania
209 South 33rd St., Philadelphia, PA 19104
Date: May 15, 2006
Abstract:
We recently have reported (J. Chem. Phys. 122, 164701 (2005))
a family of electroconvective patterns
that arise when charge-stabilized colloidal dispersions are driven by
constant (DC) vertical electric fields.
Competition between gravity and
electrokinetic forces acting on the individual spheres in this system
leads to the formation of highly organized convective instabilities involving
hundreds of spheres.
Here, we report a distinct class of electroconvective patterns
that emerge in confined aqueous dispersions at higher biases.
These qualitatively resemble the honeycomb and labyrinthine patterns
formed during thermally driven Rayleigh-Bénard convection, but
arise from a distinct mechanism.
Unlike the localized colloidal electroconvective patterns observed at lower
biases, moreover, these system-spanning patterns form even without
dispersed colloidal particles.
Rather, they appear to result from an underlying electroconvective
instability during electrolysis in the parallel plate geometry.
This contrasts with recent theoretical results suggesting that
simple electrolytes are linearly stable against electroconvection.
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David G. Grier
2006-05-15