Colloids: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
		Jump to navigation
		Jump to search
		
| Carl McBride (talk | contribs) m (Added a See also section) | Carl McBride (talk | contribs)  m (→Models:   Added aninternal link) | ||
| Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
| *[[C60#Girifalco potential | Girifalco potential]] | *[[C60#Girifalco potential | Girifalco potential]] | ||
| *[[Hard core Yukawa potential | Repulsive hard core Yukawa potential]] | *[[Hard core Yukawa potential | Repulsive hard core Yukawa potential]] | ||
| *[[Zeta potential]] | |||
| ==See also== | ==See also== | ||
| *[[Patchy particles]] | *[[Patchy particles]] | ||
Revision as of 16:50, 17 March 2010
A colloid consists of small particles of one substance suspended in another, first described by Thomas Graham in the mid nineteenth century [1].
Models
See also
References
Related reading
- H.C. Hamaker "The London-van der Waals attraction between spherical particles", Physica 4 pp. 1058-1072 (1937)
- Wilson Poon, Peter Pusey and Henk Lekkerkerker "Colloids in suspense", Physics World April pp. 27-34 (1996)
- Alfons van Blaaderen "Colloids get complex", Nature 439 pp. 545-546 (2006)
Books
- W. B. Russel, D. A. Saville and W. R. Schowalter "Colloidal Dispersions", Cambridge Monographs on Mechanics (1989) ISBN 9780521426008
