4 research outputs found
Dopamine Polymerization in Liquid Marbles: A General Route to Janus Particle Synthesis
Coating
a liquid with a particle shell not only renders a droplet
superhydrophobic but also isolates a well-confined microenvironment
for miniaturized chemical processes. Previously, we have demonstrated
that particles at the liquid marble interface provide an ideal platform
for the site-selective modification of superhydrophobic particles.
However, the need for a special chemical reaction limits their potential
use for the fabrication of Janus particles with various properties.
Herein, we combine the employment of liquid marbles as microreactors
with the remarkable adhesive ability of polydopamine to develop a
general route for the synthesis of Janus particles from micrometer-sized
superhydrophobic particles. We demonstrate that dopamine polymerization
and deposition inside liquid marbles could be used for the selective
surface modification of microsized silica particles, resulting in
the formation of Janus particles. Moreover, it is possible to manipulate
the Janus balance of the particles via the addition of surfactants
and/or organic solvents to tune the interfacial energy. More importantly,
owing to the many functional groups in polydopamine, we show that
versatile strategies could be introduced to use these partially polydopamine-coated
silica particles as platforms for further modification, including
nanoparticle immobilization, metal ion chelation and reduction, as
well as for chemical reactions. Given the flexibility in the choice
of cores and the modification strategies, this developed method is
distinctive in its high universality, good controllability, and great
practicability
One-Step Formation of W/O/W Multiple Emulsions Stabilized by Single Amphiphilic Block Copolymers
Multiple emulsions are complex polydispersed systems
in which both
oil-in-water (O/W) and water-in-oil (W/O) emulsion exists simultaneously.
They are often prepared accroding to a two-step process and commonly
stabilized using a combination of hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfactants.
Recently, some reports have shown that multiple emulsions can also
be produced through one-step method with simultaneous occurrence of
catastrophic and transitional phase inversions. However, these reported
multiple emulsions need surfactant blends and are usually described
as transitory or temporary systems. Herein, we report a one-step phase
inversion process to produce water-in-oil-in-water (W/O/W) multiple
emulsions stabilized solely by a synthetic diblock copolymer. Unlike
the use of small molecule surfactant combinations, block copolymer
stabilized multiple emulsions are remarkably stable and show the ability
to separately encapsulate both polar and nonpolar cargos. The importance
of the conformation of the copolymer surfactant at the interfaces
with regards to the stability of the multiple emulsions using the
one-step method is discussed
Stabilization of Colloidal Suspensions: Competing Effects of Nanoparticle Halos and Depletion Mechanism
Bimodal colloidal mixtures of nanoparticles and microparticles
may show different phase behaviors depending upon the interparticle
interaction of both species. In the present work, we examined the
stabilization of spherical microparticles using highly charged, spherical
nanoparticles. Total internal reflection microscopy (TIRM) was used
to measure the interaction forces between a charged microparticle
and flat glass substrate in aqueous solutions at varying volume fractions
of nanoparticles of the same sign. We found that, in the system containing
of highly charged nanoparticles, microparticle, and glass substrate,
non-adsorbing charged nanoparticles in solution did not lead to depletion
attraction. Instead, the addition of nanoparticles was to consistently
create a repulsive force between the microparticle and glass substrate
even at a very low nanoparticle volume fraction. This result might
attributed to the formation of thin shells (halos) with a high local
nanoparticle volume fraction to the region near the glass surface,
resulting in electrostatic repulsion between the decorated surfaces.
This study demonstrates that nanoparticle halos can also arise in
binary systems of mutually but highly repulsive microparticle/nanoparticle
dispersions
Preparation of Uniform Particle-Stabilized Emulsions Using SPG Membrane Emulsification
Various aspects of particle-stabilized
emulsions (or so-called
Pickering emulsions) have been extensively investigated during the
last two decades, but the preparation of uniform Pickering emulsion
droplets via a simple and scalable method has been sparingly realized.
We report the preparation of uniform Pickering emulsions by Shirasu
porous glass (SPG) membrane emulsification. The size of the emulsion
droplets ranging from 10–50 μm can be precisely controlled
by the size of the membrane pore. The emulsion droplets have a high
monodispersity with coefficients of variation (CV) lower than 15%
in all of the investigated systems. We further demonstrate the feasibility
of locking the assembled particles at the interface, and emulsion
droplets have been shown to be excellent templates for the preparation
of monodisperse colloidosomes that are necessary in drug-delivery
systems