Langmuir, Vol.22, No.6, 2876-2883, 2006
Structuring of macroions confined between like-charged surfaces
We investigate the structuring of charged spherical nanoparticles and micelles (i.e., "macroions") between two surfaces as a function of bulk macroion concentration. Structuring is deduced from measured force profiles between a silica particle and a silica plate in the presence of an aqueous macroion (Ludox silica nanoparticle or sodium dodecyl sulfate micelle) solution, obtained with an atomic force microscope. We observe oscillatory force profiles that decay with separation. We find that the wavelength of the force profiles scales with the bulk number density as p(-1/3), rather than with the effective macroion size. Only at very high silica nanoparticle concentration (above 10 vol %) in a low ionic strength solution does the wavelength become smaller than that predicted by the simple p(-1/3) scaling; however, the original scaling is recovered upon the addition of a small amount of electrolyte. A comparison between the measured wavelength and the predicted spacing between the macroions in the bulk shows that the two variables differ in both magnitude and bulk density scaling. This finding suggests that confined macroions are more ordered than those in the bulk and the nature of this ordering is maintained over a relatively wide range of bulk concentration.