fig2

Review: Micro- and macro-scale transport of tire wear particles in aquatic environments and risk control

Figure 2. Schematic illustration of DLVO and XDLVO theory for TWP colloidal stability. The XDLVO total interaction energy (VT) comprises van der Waals attraction (VA), electrostatic double-layer repulsion (VE), and polar (acid-base) interaction (VP). The energy barrier (Vmax) and secondary minimum (Vmin2) determine dispersion vs. aggregation. Higher ionic strength compresses the double layer, lowering the barrier and promoting aggregation; NOM adsorption may introduce steric effects. Aging oxidizes TWP surfaces, increases hydrophilicity and polar repulsion (VP), raising the barrier and inhibiting aggregation. Zeta potential magnitude alone is not a universal predictor of stability; actual behavior requires XDLVO analysis under specific solution conditions (pH, ionic strength, NOM) [created by Nanobanana (Gemini 2.5 Flash Image)]. DLVO: Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek theory; XDLVO: extended DLVO; TWP: tire wear particle; NOM: natural organic matter.

Journal of Environmental Exposure Assessment
ISSN 2771-5949 (Online)

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