Surface forces
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Surface forces
Springer Science+Business Media, [2013?]
- Other Title
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Poverkhnostnye sily
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Note
"Originally published by Plenum Publishing Corporation, New York in 1987"--T. p. verso
Original title from CIP data on t.p. verso
"Institute of Physical Chemistry, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow, USSR."
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This monograph is devoted to long-range surface forces sig nificant far beyond a single monolayer and felt over tens or even hundreds of molecular layers adjacent to an interface. The transi tion from the concept of short-range effects that reigned earlier to the concept of long-range forces simultaneously signified the transition from a two-dimensional world to a three-dimensional one, incomparably richer in physicochemical phenomena. This transition took many years and evolved through many steps. It began with the Gouy-Chapman theory of diffuse ionic atmospheres, which together with London's theory of molecular forces was used as a basis for the development (beginning in 1937) of the DLVO theory of stability of lyophobic colloids. Further elaboration of the theory involved the introduction of new types of force, and a generalization (in 1954) to the case of interaction between unlike particles (hetero coagulation). This theory is fundamental in such large-scale prac tical problems as flotation, water treatment, dyeing, soil science, microbiology, and interaction between biological cells. This book is the first comprehensive monograph devoted to sur face forces. This fact makes it easier to attract the reader's interest; yet, the reader's demands become all the more difficult to satisfy completely. Indeed, the research that we review and analyze here covers about 50 years of work. Much data has been amassed, so that the main problem was a careful selection and an alysis.
Table of Contents
1. Forces Near Interfaces.- 2. Disjoining Pressure.- 3. The Thermodynamic Theory of Stability of Thin Films.- 4. Dispersion Forces in Thin Interlayers and Films.- 5. The Adsorption Component of Disjoining Pressure in Nonionic Solutions.- 6. The Electrostatic Component of Disjoining Pressure.- 7. The Structure of Boundary Layers of Liquids and the Structural Component of Disjoining Pressure.- 8. The Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (Dlvo) Theory of Stability of Lyophobic Colloids.- 9. The Theory of Heterocoagulation in Lyophobic Systems.- 10. Wetting Films.- 11. Surface Forces in Transport Phenomena.- Conclusion.
by "Nielsen BookData"