Effects of Light Dispersed Particles on the Stability of Dense Suspended Particles Against Sedimentation

J Phys Chem B. 2019 Jan 31;123(4):922-935. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.8b10172. Epub 2019 Jan 16.

Abstract

A novel method in which vesicular dispersions of the double-chain cationic surfactant DDAB (didodecyldimethylammonium bromide) stabilize suspensions of high density titania particles was recently presented (Yang, Y.-J; Corti, D.S.; Franses, E. I. Langmuir 2015, 31, 8802-8808). At high enough DDAB concentration, the vesicles form a close-packed structure, providing strong resistance to the sedimentation of the titania particles, while the dispersions remain highly shear-thinning with moderate limiting viscosities. Here, to elucidate the key factors of the mechanism by which vesicles or other nonsettling particles stabilize high density particles against sedimentation, we use Brownian dynamics simulations (BDS) to examine the sedimentation behavior of mixtures of "dense particles" that settle rapidly on their own and "light particles" that represent nonsettling "rigid vesicles". BDS confirm that for large enough values of the volume fraction ϕ2 of the light particles, the dense particles should remain suspended. The rheological behavior of the mixtures is also computed with BDS. The observed shear-thinning behavior of the light particle dispersion suggests that the suspensions of the dense particles are still flowable at high shear stresses. Furthermore, the local viscosity of light particles around the dense particles significantly increases with increasing ϕ2, particularly when the same gravitational force applied in the BDS is exerted on a dense particle. The arrangement of light particles around the moving dense particles is an important factor in determining the stability of the dense particles against sedimentation. The BDS results indicate that dispersions of nonsettling particles provide a general method for the stabilization against sedimentation of high density particles.