Spontaneous particle desorption and "Gorgon" drop formation from particle-armored oil drops upon cooling
Abstract
Drop "self-shaping" is a phenomenon in which cooled oily emulsion drops undergo a spectacular series of shape transformations (Denkov et al., Nature 528, 2015, 392). Solid particles adsorbed on the oil-water interface could affect this drop self-shaping process in multiple ways which have not been studied. We prepared Pickering emulsions stabilized by spherical latex particles and afterwards added surfactant of low concentration which enabled drop self-shaping. Next we observed by optical microscopy the processes which occur upon emulsion cooling. Several new processes were observed: (1) Adsorbed latex particles rearranged into regular hexagonal lattices upon freezing of the surfactant adsorption layer. (2) Spontaneous particle desorption from the drop surface was observed at a certain temperature - this phenomenon is rather remarkable, as the solid particles are known to irreversibly adsorb on fluid interfaces. (3) Very strongly adhered particles to drop surfaces acted as a template to enable the formation of tens to hundreds of semi-liquid fibers, growing outwards from the drop surface, thus creating a shape resembling the Gorgon head from Greek mythology. We provide mechanistic explanations of all observed phenomena using our understanding of the rotator phase formation on the surface of cooled drops.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.