J. W. VanderhoffH. J. van den Hul
Abstract Monodisperse polystyrene latexes prepared with persulfate-ion initiator can be ion exchanged to remove the adsorbed emulsifier and solute electrolyte. Rigorous purification of the ion-exchange'resins is necessary to avoid contamination with leached polyelectrolytes. These ion-exchanged latexes are stabilized with the residual sulfate end-groups of the polymer molecules, the number of which is determined by conductoroetric titration. The result is a dispersion of monodisperse spheres with-a constant and known surface charge due to chemically-bound strong-acid groups. These latexes are ideal models for colloidal studies. Preliminary experiments of stability, adsorption, sedimentation, viscosity, interference colors, and conductance give consistent results, e.g., the particle double-layer interactions determined by viscosity are in accord -with the particle spacings estimated from interference colors, the double-layer parameters estimated from conductometric titration and conductance measurements account for the measured decrease in sedimentation rate due to double-layer interactions, and the molecular area of sodium dodecyl sulfate measured by adsorption in latex is in agreement with literature values.
H. J. van den HulJ. W. Vanderhoff
H. J. van den HulJ. W. Vanderhoff