Review of agglomeration in ferrofluids

1980; IEEE Magnetics Society; Volume: 16; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1109/tmag.1980.1060598

ISSN

1941-0069

Autores

David A. Krueger,

Tópico(s)

Theoretical and Computational Physics

Resumo

Ideally, magnetic colloids have sufficient surfactant and thermal agitation to prevent the agglomeration of the particles. However, agglomeration has been observed in light scattering, light microscope observations, pulsed magnetization measurements, and gravitational settling experiments. Agglomerate sizes have ranged from a chain of a few particles to ellipsoidal clumps of more than 10 10 particles. The agglomeration appears to be reversible and strongly dependent upon the applied magnetic field and the particular ferrofluid. Theoretical approaches are based either on equilibrium statistical mechanics (for small agglomerates) or on a) minimizing the energy per particle and b) calculating a critical hydrodynamic shear stress (for large agglomerates under gravitational settling). We review the experiments, the theories, and some areas for future research.

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