Disjoining pressure
In surface chemistry, disjoining pressure according to an IUPAC definition arises from an attractive interaction between two surfaces. For two flat and parallel surfaces, the value of the disjoining pressure can be calculated as the derivative of the Gibbs energy of interaction per unit area in respect to distance. There is also a related concept of disjoining force, which can be viewed as disjoining pressure times the surface area of the interacting surfaces.
The concept of disjoining pressure was introduced by Derjaguin as the difference between the pressure in a region of a phase adjacent to a surface confining it, and the pressure in the bulk of this phase.
Description
Disjoining pressure can be expressed as:where :
- - disjoining pressure
- - the surface area of the interacting surfaces
- - total Gibbs energy of the interaction of the two surfaces
- - distance
- indices and signify that the temperature, volume, and the surface area remain constant in the derivative.
where:
- - pressure in a film
- - pressure in the bulk of the same phase as that of the film
Classic theory predicts that the disjoining pressure of a thin liquid film on a flat surface as follows,
where:
- - Hamaker constant
- - liquid film thickness
where:
- - solid-liquid potential
where:
- - total system free energy including surface excess energy and free energy due to solid-liquid interactions
- - meniscus shape
- - slope of meniscus shape
where is the liquid-vapor surface tension and is the precursor film thickness.