论文标题
我们可以用电解质理论描述带电的纳米颗粒吗?介绍模拟技术的见解
Can we describe charged nanoparticles with electrolyte theories? Insight from mesoscopic simulation techniques
论文作者
论文摘要
电解质理论可以描述溶液中简单电解质的结构和动力学特性,例如水中的氯化钠。将这些理论用于带电纳米颗粒的水溶液是从实验数据中提取电荷和大小的直接途径。然而,对于如此强烈的不对称电解质,通过精确的仿真结果,从未对基础近似的有效性受到适当的挑战。在目前的工作中,在无盐的情况下,使用了良好的介观数模拟来挑战高级电解质理论预测带电纳米颗粒悬浮液的电导率的能力。所研究的理论基于电解质运输的Debye-Fuoss-posager处理。当纳米颗粒足够小(大约一个纳米大)时,理论结果即使在高浓度状态下(纳米颗粒的包装分数大于3 $ \%$)也非常吻合。令人惊讶的是,对于高电荷的纳米颗粒,该理论能够捕获无电导率与其在无限稀释(理想值)(理想值)(理想值)之比的非单调变化,这是浓度的函数。但是,测试的理论无法描述含有较大纳米颗粒的悬浮液的电导率({\ em,例如直径$ 4 $ 〜nm)。最后,就电解质理论而言,只有小带电的纳米颗粒可以被视为{\ em ions}。
Electrolyte theories enable to describe the structural and dynamical properties of simple electrolytes in solution, such as sodium chloride in water. Using these theories for aqueous solutions of charged nanoparticles is a straightforward route to extract their charge and size from experimental data. Nevertheless, for such strongly asymmetric electrolytes, the validity of the underlying approximations have never been properly challenged with exact simulation results. In the present work, well established mesoscopic numerical simulations are used to challenge the ability of advanced electrolyte theories to predict the electrical conductivity of suspensions of charged nanoparticles, in the salt-free case. The theories under investigation are based on the Debye-Fuoss-Onsager treatment of electrolyte transport. When the nanoparticles are small enough (about one nanometer large), the theoretical results agree remarkably well with the simulation ones, even in the high concentration regime (packing fraction of in nanoparticles larger than 3$\%$ ). Strikingly, for highly charged nanoparticles, the theory is able to capture the non-monotonic variation of the ratio of the electrical conductivity to its value at infinite dilution (ideal value) as a function of the concentration. However, the tested theories fail to describe the conductivity of suspensions containing larger nanoparticles ({\em e.g.} of diameter $4$~nm). Finally, only small charged nanoparticles can be considered as {\em ions}, as far as electrolyte theories are concerned.