New Study Shows Like-Charged Particles Attract or Repel in Solution (nature.com) 18
You know how like-charged objects repel — and do so regardless of the sign of their electrical charge? Maybe not always, according to new research published in Nature.
"We demonstrate experimentally that the solvent plays a hitherto unforeseen but crucial role in interparticle interactions," they write. But more importantly, "interactions in the fluid phase can break charge-reversal symmetry.
We show that in aqueous solution, negatively charged particles can attract at long range while positively charged particles repel. [In solvents like alcohols "that exhibit an inversion of the net molecular dipole at an interface"], positively charged particles may attract whereas negatives repel.
The observations hold across a wide variety of surface chemistries: from inorganic silica and polymeric particles to polyelectrolyte- and polypeptide-coated surfaces in aqueous solution.
A theory of interparticle interactions that invokes solvent structuring at an interface captures the observations. Our study establishes a nanoscopic interfacial mechanism by which solvent molecules may give rise to a strong and long-ranged force in solution, with immediate ramifications for a range of particulate and molecular processes across length scales such as self-assembly, gelation and crystallization, biomolecular condensation, coacervation, and phase segregation.
The delicate interplay of interactions between objects in the fluid phase influences the behaviour, organization and properties of systems from nanometric to more macroscopic size and length scales and thus underpins a wealth of natural phenomena...
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Greymane for sharing the article.
"We demonstrate experimentally that the solvent plays a hitherto unforeseen but crucial role in interparticle interactions," they write. But more importantly, "interactions in the fluid phase can break charge-reversal symmetry.
We show that in aqueous solution, negatively charged particles can attract at long range while positively charged particles repel. [In solvents like alcohols "that exhibit an inversion of the net molecular dipole at an interface"], positively charged particles may attract whereas negatives repel.
The observations hold across a wide variety of surface chemistries: from inorganic silica and polymeric particles to polyelectrolyte- and polypeptide-coated surfaces in aqueous solution.
A theory of interparticle interactions that invokes solvent structuring at an interface captures the observations. Our study establishes a nanoscopic interfacial mechanism by which solvent molecules may give rise to a strong and long-ranged force in solution, with immediate ramifications for a range of particulate and molecular processes across length scales such as self-assembly, gelation and crystallization, biomolecular condensation, coacervation, and phase segregation.
The delicate interplay of interactions between objects in the fluid phase influences the behaviour, organization and properties of systems from nanometric to more macroscopic size and length scales and thus underpins a wealth of natural phenomena...
Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader Greymane for sharing the article.
Anyone got a dumbed-down version? (Score:2)
Re:Anyone got a dumbed-down version? (Score:4, Insightful)
Magic aliens.
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I'm sure it's confusing ICP too and they're writing a rap song about it as we speak.
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There's not a complete explanation. Just a lot of very interesting observations and some theories. This is the sort of "oh, that's weird" initial research that sometimes forms the basis of a lot of interesting new developments.
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Allow me to armchair amateur an explanation: At these scales, everything is in motion, mostly random but with some currents (river or stream-like, not electrical). In water, the aqueous solution part, there are relatively free electrons hanging around in the mildly ionic solvent. With alcohols, the molecules have a relatively positive localized spot, more concentrated than the d
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I get what they're saying they found, but not the explanation of why it's happening.
According to the religious crowd it would be because God did it.
Re:Anyone got a dumbed-down version? (Score:4, Interesting)
Super simple explanation:
When you have a (-) particle in solution, it attracts a bunch of (+) particles. Which in turn attract some (-) particles at longer distances.
Also, polar solution molecules get their (+) ends attracted to the (-), dragging their own (-) ends along behind them. Weird stuff ensues.
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Like holes in semiconductors (Score:2)
Their process looks like a type of doping. Net positive current flow from the vacancy of electrons or negative charge.
https://www.allaboutcircuits.c... [allaboutcircuits.com]
Is this good for Electric Universe theory? (Score:1)
No?
Not suprising (Score:2)
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It's sensitive to pH, so it's not the polar molecules that are doing it. It's the good old H+ and OH- ions.
The summary is probably misleading (Score:2)
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What if two planets attract at long range because of electricity, not gravity?