Search results for "Hydrophobic surfaces"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Slippage of water over hydrophobic surfaces

1999

When water is confined between hydrophobic surfaces, its flow properties are significantly different from those in bulk, or between hydrophilic surfaces. These changes (that are usually ignored) may be interpreted in terms of hydrophobic slippage. This chapter reviews recent developments in the hydrodynamics of water confined between solid hydrophobic surfaces, emphasizing the main experimental facts, theoretical models suggested, and different aspects of thin film drainage. The relevance of slippage in hydrophobic surface force measurements and on the coagulation rate of hydrophobic particles is discussed.

Hydrophobic effectCoagulation rateChromatographyChemical engineeringHydrophobic surfacesHydrometallurgyGeochemistry and PetrologyChemistrySurface forceTheoretical modelsSlippageThin filmGeotechnical Engineering and Engineering GeologyInternational Journal of Mineral Processing
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About the relevance of anion-π interactions in water.

2021

Anion-π interactions are emerging as exotic features with potential applications in chemistry. In the last years, their relevance in living systems has been outlined, and so far there is no concluding significant evidence recognized about the participation of anion-π interactions in water because anion-π sensors contain large aromatic hydrophobic surfaces with limited solubility. By transforming a neutral heterocycle (for example quinoline) into its corresponding salt (quinolinium), we have been able to overcome these solubility issues, and new cationic water-soluble fluorophores have been prepared. Herein, we used N-alkylated heterocycles as π-acidic surfaces to shed light on the nature of…

Inorganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundHydrophobic surfacesComputational chemistryChemistryQuinolineCationic polymerizationSalt (chemistry)Vis spectraSolubilityFluorescenceIonDalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003)
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