Dispersion forces between macroscopic bodies : effects due to electrolyte and geometry
Abstract
This thesis is divided into six chapters. The first of these
is an introductory chapter, intended to provide a background for the
next five chapters, and to put the subject matter and the methods used
into perspective. The main thrust of the thesis is in the second, third
and sixth chapters; the fourth chapter being an appendix to the third,
and the fifth an introduction to the sixth.
The second chapter introduces the topic of spatial dispersion,
and the question of additional boundary conditions (a.b.c.’s) is examined.
Explicit expressions are obtained for the allowed electromagnetic modes
in a film of spatially dispersive medium, in the case of a particular
a.b.c., and for a very general class of dielectric constants. The full
retarded dispersion free energy of two spatially dispersive half spaces
interacting across a slab of non spatially dispersive material, and the
opposite case of a film of spatially dispersive material, is calculated
for a particular form of the dielectric constant. For the former case
it is found that spatial dispersion is unimportant unless the separation
of the half-spaces is comparable with characteristic lengths associated
with spatial dispersion. In the remaining chapters the particular example of spatial
dispersion provided by electrolytes is examined. In Chapter 3 the interaction
of two planar double layers is considered by a formalism due to
Craig. Besides obtaining many old results which are unified by this
approach, some new results emerge, including an extra long range repulsion,
which can give a significant correction to the classical expressions. The
appendatory chapter, Chapter 4, indicates how the low surface charge
methods considered in Chapter 3 may be extended to arbitrary surface charges. The final chapters, 5 and 6, are concerned with the effect of
geometry on the interaction in electrolyte. In Chapter 5 we calculate
the interaction free energy of two spheres in terms of spherical harmonic
wave-functions, and indicate a possible method of solution of Helmholtz’s
equation using bispherical wave-functions. The distance dependence of
the interaction energy of two polarizable dipoles is obtained as a special
case. This chapter also provides an introduction to the more general
considerations of the last chapter.
We develop in Chapter 6 a perturbation expansion from an
integral equation solution of Helmholtz's equation, which is suitable for
usewhen the interacting bodies, which, though required to be smooth,
may be of arbitrary shape, are close together. Some old results are
recovered, and we present analytical expressions for the leading terms
in the interaction between bodies of cylindrical, spherical and ellipticparaboloidal
geometrical shape. In addition, we calculate curvature
corrections to the Onsager-Samaras result for the effect of electrolyte
on the surface tension of ionic solutions. Some numerical estimates are
reported.
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