Oscillating Electric Fields in Liquids Create a Long-Range Steady Field
ORAL
Abstract
We demonstrate that application of an oscillatory electric field to a liquid yields a long-range steady field, provided the ions present have unequal mobilities. The main physics are illustrated by a two-ion harmonic oscillator, yielding an asymmetric rectified field whose time average scales as the square of the applied field strength. Computations of the fully nonlinear electrokinetic model corroborate the two-ion model and further demonstrate that steady fields extend over large distances between two electrodes. Experimental measurements of the levitation height of micron-scale colloids versus applied frequency accord with the numerical predictions. The heretofore unsuspected existence of a long-range steady field helps explain several longstanding questions regarding the behavior of particles and electrically-induced fluid flows in response to oscillatory potentials.
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Presenters
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William D. Ristenpart
University of California, Davis
Authors
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William D. Ristenpart
University of California, Davis
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Seyyed M. H. Hashemi Amrei
University of California, Davis
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Scott C. Bukosky
University of California, Davis
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Sean P. Rader
University of California, Davis
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Gregory H. Miller
University of California, Davis