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General characteristic of the dispersed systems. Plan 1. The main concepts and determination 2. Classification of the disperse d systems 3. Preparation methods of the disperse d systems 4. purification methods of the disperse d systems. Assistant Kozachok S.S. prepared.
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General characteristic of the dispersed systems Plan 1. The main concepts and determination 2. Classification of the dispersed systems 3. Preparation methods of the dispersed systems 4. purification methods of the dispersedsystems Assistant Kozachok S.S. prepared
PHASES OF COLLOIDS THEIR CLASSIFICATION A colloidal solution is of heterogeneous nature. It consists of two phases i.e. a dispersed phase and a dispersion medium. Dispersed phase. It is the component present in small proportion and is just like a solute in a solution.
Classification of the dispersed systems according to the particle size Ultramicroheterogeneous 10-7 ÷ 10-9 м Microheterogeneous 10-4 ÷ 10-7 м Coarse-dispersion >10-4 м
Colloidal particlescan be classified according to shape as corpuscular,laminar or linear Manycolloidal systems do, in fact, contain spherical ornearly sphericalparticles. Emulsions, latexes, liquid aerosols, etc., contain sphericalparticles. Certain protein molecules are approximately spherical. Thecrystallite particles in dispersions such as gold and silver iodide solsare sufficiently symmetrical to behave like spheres.
Classification of dispersed systems according to the particle-particleinteraction Free dispersion or no sharp line of demarcation (particles moving free) sols Not free dispersion or sharp line of demarcation (particle-particleinteraction between themself) gels, foams
Classification of dispersed systems according to the particle-dispersion mediuminteraction Lyophilic (liquid-loving) good interaction of dispersed particle with dispersed medium emulsion and a water-in-oil Lyophobic (liquid-hating) (no any interaction of dispersed particle with dispersed medium)emulsion an oil-inwater
Condensation methods of the preparation of the colloidal solutions. It bases on the appearing of a new phase in the homogenius phase according to the joining of molecules, atoms,ions.
A further modification of dialysis is the technique of electrodialysis
Ultrafiltration:а) vacuum; b) preassure c) gel permeation chromatography а) b)
c)Another most valuable development of the ultrafiltration principle is the technique of gel permeation chromatography for the separation of the components of a polymeric sample and determination of the relative molecular mass distribution. The usual experimental arrangement involves the application of a pressure to force polymer solution through a chromatographic column filled with porous beads. The larger polymer molecules tend not to enter the pores of the beads and so pass through the column relatively quickly, whereas the smaller polymer molecules tend to diffuse through the pore structure of the beads and so take longer to pass through the column. The eluted polymer can be detected and estimated by measuring the refractive index of the emerging solution, and the relationship between retention time and relative molecular mass is determined by calibrating the apparatus with polymer fractions which have been characterised by other methods, such as osmotic pressure