Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Depletion_force> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 76 of
76
with 100 triples per page.
- Depletion_force abstract "A depletion force is an effective attractive force that arises between large colloidal particles that are suspended in a dilute solution of depletants, which are smaller solutes that are preferentially excluded from the vicinity of the large particles. One of the earliest reports of depletion forces that lead to particle coagulation is that of Bondy, who observed the separation or 'creaming' of rubber latex upon addition of polymer depletant molecules (sodium alginate) to solution. More generally, depletants can include polymers, micelles, osmolytes, ink, mud, or paint dispersed in a continuous phase.Depletion forces are often regarded as entropic forces, as was first explained by the established Asakura-Oosawa model. In this theory the depletion force arises from an increase in osmotic pressure of the surrounding solution when colloidal particles get close enough such that the excluded cosolutes (depletants) cannot fit in between them.Because the particles were considered as hard-core (completely rigid) particles, the emerging picture of the underlying mechanism inducing the force was necessarily entropic.".
- Depletion_force wikiPageID "39639151".
- Depletion_force wikiPageLength "33823".
- Depletion_force wikiPageOutDegree "78".
- Depletion_force wikiPageRevisionID "702866317".
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Anisotropy.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Atomic-force_microscopy.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Boltzmann_constant.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Canonical_ensemble.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Carbohydrate.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Category:Colloidal_chemistry.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Category:Thermodynamic_entropy.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Cell_(biology).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Colloid.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Conformational_entropy.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Density_functional_theory.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Derjaguin_approximation.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Dispersion_(chemistry).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Drag_(physics).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Electric_charge.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Entropic_force.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Entropy.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Extracellular_matrix.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Filtration.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Flocculation.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Glycerol.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Grand_canonical_ensemble.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Grand_potential.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Hard_spheres.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Helmholtz_free_energy.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Kirkwood–Buff_solution_theory.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Macromolecular_crowding.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Macromolecule.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Matter_wave.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Micelle.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Molecular_mass.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Must.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Number_density.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Optical_tweezers.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Osmolyte.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Osmotic_pressure.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Partition_function_(statistical_mechanics).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Phase_(matter).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Polymer.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Precipitation_(chemistry).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Protein.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Second_law_of_thermodynamics.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Solution.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Solvent.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Sorbitol.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Suspension_(chemistry).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Trehalose.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Vesicle_(biology_and_chemistry).
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:athermal.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:continuous_phase.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink File:Asakura-Oosawa_Model,_Two_Plates_in_a_solution_of_Macromolecules.png.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink File:Asakura-Oosawa_first_two_cases.png.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink File:Derjaguin_Approximation.png.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLink File:Overlap_volume_between_hard_spheres.png.
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLinkText "Depletion force".
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLinkText "Depletion force#Enthalpic depletion forces".
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLinkText "depletion force".
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLinkText "effect of depletion".
- Depletion_force wikiPageWikiLinkText "hard-code".
- Depletion_force wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Depletion_force subject Category:Colloidal_chemistry.
- Depletion_force subject Category:Thermodynamic_entropy.
- Depletion_force hypernym Force.
- Depletion_force type MilitaryUnit.
- Depletion_force comment "A depletion force is an effective attractive force that arises between large colloidal particles that are suspended in a dilute solution of depletants, which are smaller solutes that are preferentially excluded from the vicinity of the large particles. One of the earliest reports of depletion forces that lead to particle coagulation is that of Bondy, who observed the separation or 'creaming' of rubber latex upon addition of polymer depletant molecules (sodium alginate) to solution.".
- Depletion_force label "Depletion force".
- Depletion_force sameAs Q17010300.
- Depletion_force sameAs m.0vzr71h.
- Depletion_force sameAs Q17010300.
- Depletion_force wasDerivedFrom Depletion_force?oldid=702866317.
- Depletion_force isPrimaryTopicOf Depletion_force.