The most popular model to describe the electrical double layer is the Poisson-Boltzmann (PB) model. This model can be equally used to evaluate double layer forces. Let us discuss this model in the case of planar geometry as shown in the figure on the right. In this case, the electrical potential profile
ψ(
z) near a charged interface will only depend on the position
z. The corresponding
Poisson's equation reads in
SI units : \frac{d^2 \psi}{dz^2} = - \frac{\rho}{\epsilon_0 \epsilon} where
ρ is the charge density per unit volume,
ε0 the dielectric permittivity of the vacuum, and
ε the
dielectric constant of the liquid. For a symmetric electrolyte consisting of cations and anions having a charge ±
q, the charge density can be expressed as : \rho = q (c_+ - c_-) where
c± =
N±/
V are the concentrations of the cations and anions, where
N± are their numbers and
V the sample volume. These profiles can be related to the electrical potential by considering the fact that the
chemical potential of the ions is constant. For both ions, this relation can be written as : \mu_\pm = \mu_+^{(0)} + kT \ln c_\pm \pm q \psi where \mu_\pm^{(0)} is the reference chemical potential,
T the absolute temperature, and
k the
Boltzmann constant. The reference chemical potential can be eliminated by applying the same equation far away from the surface where the potential is assumed to vanish and concentrations attain the bulk concentration
cB. The concentration profiles thus become : c_\pm = c_{\rm B} e^{ \mp \beta q \psi} where
β = 1/(
kT). This relation reflects the
Boltzmann distribution of the ions with the energy ±
qψ. Inserting these relations into the Poisson equation one obtains the
PB equation : \frac{d^2 \psi}{dz^2} = \frac{q c_{\rm B}}{\epsilon_0 \epsilon} [e^{+\beta q \psi} - e^{-\beta q \psi}] The potential profile between two plates is normally obtained by solving this equation numerically. Once the potential profile is known, the force per unit area between the plates expressed as the disjoining pressure Π can be obtained as follows. The starting point is the
Gibbs–Duhem relation for a two component system at constant temperature : -V d\Pi + N_+ d\mu_+ + N_- d\mu_- = 0 Introducing the concentrations
c± and using the expressions of the chemical potentials
μ± given above one finds : d\Pi = kT(dc_+ + dc_-) + q(c_+ - c_-) d \psi The concentration difference can be eliminated with the Poisson equation and the resulting equation can be integrated from infinite separation of the plates to the actual separation
h by realizing that : 2 (d^2 \psi / dz^2) d\psi = d (d\psi / dz)^2 Expressing the concentration profiles in terms of the potential profiles one obtains : \Pi = kT c_{\rm B}(e^{+\beta q \psi} + e^{-\beta q \psi} - 2) - \frac{\epsilon_0 \epsilon}{2} \left(\frac{d \psi}{dz} \right)^2 From a known electrical potential profile
ψ(
z) one can calculate the disjoining pressure from this equation at any suitable position
z. Alternative derivation of the same relation for disjoining pressure involves the stress tensor. ==Debye-Hückel model==