There is more and more scientific investigation into this phenomenon,
which until about 5 years ago, was ignored or put into the too hard
basket.

Ivan



WHEN LIKE CHARGES ATTRACT
The above title implies that a basic law of physics has been
overturned. Indeed, a commentary in Nature by C.A. Murray begins as
follows:

"Larsen and Grier, on page 230 of this issue [Ref. 2], show that two
similarly charged polymer spheres suspended in water can attract each
other when they are several diameters apart. This surprising result
casts some light on a tricky theoretical many-body problem that has
been swept under the rug for a century, and it has implications for
colloids in nature and in industrial processes." (Ref. 1)
Exactly what happens is not yet clear. This counter-intuitive
phenomenon occurs in a many-body situation, where screening charges
are established between the like-charged spheres. Although Coulomb's
Law states that like charges repel one another, the presence of
screening particles complicates the picture, as do the van der Waals
dipole interactions.

The microscopic situation may be murky, but there is no doubt on the
macroscopic level that unexpected attractive forces are operating. For
example, when sub-microscopic, electrically charged latex spheres are
suspended in water, one would expect a homogeneous colloidal soup.
Instead, the tiny, charged spheres pull themselves together in patchy,
but ordered arrays. These metastable groupings of spheres are called
"crystallites." Theorists are not certain what is going on.

References

Ref. 1. Murray, Cherry A.; "When Like Charges Attract," Nature,
385:203, 1997.

Ref. 2. Larsen, Amy E., and Grier, David G.; "Like-Charge Attractions
in Metastable Colloidal Crystallites," Nature, 385:230. 1997.


>From Science Frontiers #112, JUL-AUG 1997. © 1997-2000 William R.
Corliss

-----Original Message-----
From: jrowl...@nctimes.net [mailto:jrowl...@nctimes.net]
Sent: Friday, 26 July 2002 10:56 a.m.
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: CS>Colloidal Silver Every Day?


After around 30PPM total silver, particle size instability gets to be
a
big problem and larger particles form easily out of the small ones.
Ken
If the particles have the same charge, how can they combine?
Thanks,
jr
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