DLVO theory
The DLVO theory is named after Boris Derjaguin and Lev Landau, Evert Verwey and Theodoor Overbeek.
The theory explains the aggregation of aqueous dispersions quantitatively and describes the force between charged surfaces interacting through a liquid medium.
It combines the effects of the van der Waals attraction and the electrostatic repulsion due to the so-called double layer of counterions.
The electrostatic part of the DLVO interaction is computed in the mean field approximation in the limit of low surface potentials - that is when the potential energy of an elementary charge on the surface is much smaller than the thermal energy scale, .
For two spheres of radius
each having a charge
(expressed in units of the elementary charge)
separated by a center-to-center distance
in a fluid of dielectric constant
containing a concentration
of monovalent ions,
the electrostatic potential takes the form of a screened-Coulomb or Yukawa potential,