6 research outputs found

    Self-shaping of oil droplets via the formation of intermediate rotator phases upon cooling.

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    Revealing the chemical and physical mechanisms underlying symmetry breaking and shape transformations is key to understanding morphogenesis. If we are to synthesize artificial structures with similar control and complexity to biological systems, we need energy- and material-efficient bottom-up processes to create building blocks of various shapes that can further assemble into hierarchical structures. Lithographic top-down processing allows a high level of structural control in microparticle production but at the expense of limited productivity. Conversely, bottom-up particle syntheses have higher material and energy efficiency, but are more limited in the shapes achievable. Linear hydrocarbons are known to pass through a series of metastable plastic rotator phases before freezing. Here we show that by using appropriate cooling protocols, we can harness these phase transitions to control the deformation of liquid hydrocarbon droplets and then freeze them into solid particles, permanently preserving their shape. Upon cooling, the droplets spontaneously break their shape symmetry several times, morphing through a series of complex regular shapes owing to the internal phase-transition processes. In this way we produce particles including micrometre-sized octahedra, various polygonal platelets, O-shapes, and fibres of submicrometre diameter, which can be selectively frozen into the corresponding solid particles. This mechanism offers insights into achieving complex morphogenesis from a system with a minimal number of molecular components.European Research Council (Grant ID: EMATTER 280078), European networks COST MP 1106 and 1305 and the capacity building project BeyondEverest of the European Commission (Grant ID: 286205)This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Publishing Group via http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature1618

    Detachment of Rough Colloids from Liquid–Liquid Interfaces

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    Particle surface roughness and chemistry play a pivotal role in the design of new particle-based materials. Although the adsorption of rough particles has been studied in the literature, desorption of such particles remains poorly understood. In this work, we specifically focus on the detachment of rough and chemically modified raspberry-like microparticles from water/oil interfaces using colloidal-probe atomic force microscopy. We observe different contact-line dynamics occurring upon particle detachment (pinning vs sliding), depending on both the particle roughness and surface modification. In general, surface roughness leads to a reduction of the desorption force of hydrophobic particles into the oil and provides a multitude of pinning points that can be accessed by applying different loads. Our results hence suggest future strategies for stabilization and destabilization of Pickering emulsions and foams
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