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Biophysical Journal 10: 646-663 (1970)
© 1970 the Biophysical Society
ABSTRACT
A practical method for examining and calculating van der Waals forces is derived from Lifshitz' theory. Rather than treat the total van der Waals energy as a sum of pairwise interactions between atoms, the Lifshitz theory treats component materials as continua in which there are electromagnetic fluctuations at all frequencies over the entire body. It is necessary in principle to use total macroscopic dielectric data from component substances to analyze the permitted fluctuations; in practice it is possible to use only partial information to perform satisfactory calculations. The biologically interesting case of lipid-water systems is considered in detail for illustration. The method gives good agreement with measured van der Waals energy of interaction across a lipid film. It appears that fluctuations at infrared frequencies and microwave frequencies are very important although these are usually ignored in preference to UV contributions. "Retardation effects" are such as to damp out high frequency fluctuation contributions; if interaction specificity is due to UV spectra, this will be revealed only at interactions across <200 angstrom (A). Dependence of van der Waals forces on material electric properties is discussed in terms of illustrative numerical calculations.
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