1 research outputs found
Janus Particles in a Nonpolar Solvent
Amphiphilic
Janus particles are currently receiving great attention
as “solid surfactants”. Previous studies have introduced
such particles with a variety of shapes and functions, but there has
so far been a strong emphasis on water-dispersible particles that
mimic the molecular surfactants soluble in polar solvents. Here we
present an example of lipophilic Janus particles which are selectively
dispersible in very nonpolar solvents such as alkanes. Interfacial
tension measurements between the alkane dispersions and pure water
indicate that these particles do have interfacial activity, and like
typical hydrophobic, nonionic surfactants, they do not partition to
the aqueous bulk. We also show that the oil-borne particles, by retaining
locally polar domains where charges can reside, generate electric
conductivity in nonpolar liquidsanother feature familiar from
molecular surfactants and one commonly exploited to mitigate explosion
hazards due to flow electrification during petroleum pumping and in
the formulation of electronic inks
