Bjerrum length

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Revision as of 08:32, 10 December 2022 by imported>PChemiker (Undid revision 1091947212 by 139.179.67.174 (talk) The Bjerrum length increases with temperature in spite of the 1/T dependence because the relative permittivity decreases faster than T increases.)
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Template:Short description The Bjerrum length (after Danish chemist Niels Bjerrum 1879–1958 [1]) is the separation at which the electrostatic interaction between two elementary charges is comparable in magnitude to the thermal energy scale, kBT, where kB is the Boltzmann constant and T is the absolute temperature in kelvins. This length scale arises naturally in discussions of electrostatic, electrodynamic and electrokinetic phenomena in electrolytes, polyelectrolytes and colloidal dispersions. [2]

In standard units, the Bjerrum length is given by λB=e24πε0εr kBT, where e is the elementary charge, εr is the relative dielectric constant of the medium and ε0 is the vacuum permittivity. For water at room temperature Template:Nowrap εr80, so that Template:Nowrap

In Gaussian units, 4πε0=1 and the Bjerrum length has the simpler form

Bjerrum length in water calculated as a function of temperature.

λB=e2εrkBT.

The relative permittivity εr of water decreases so strongly with temperature that the product (εr·T) decreases. Therefore, in spite of the (1/T) relation, the Bjerrum length λB increases with temperature, as shown in the graph.

See also

References

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