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1.
We review recent work on active colloids at interfaces, including self-propelled colloids that move by generating a propulsive force, and driven colloids that move under external fields. Features unique to fluid interfaces alter the flows generated at interfaces by active colloid motion, and hydrodynamic interactions with these layers. We emphasize recent observations of natural swimmers, like bacteria, and bio-mimetic colloids including self-propelled phoretic and Marangoni swimmers, and magnetically driven colloids. We discuss active colloid interaction with boundaries and with each other. We conclude with a discussion of open issues and opportunities to design active colloids as active surface agents that manipulate interfacial properties and the transport in the vicinity of interfaces.  相似文献   

2.
This review explores the intersection between two important fields of colloid and interface science – that of active colloidal particles and of (passive) particles at fluid-fluid interfaces. The former uses energy input at the particle level to propel particle motions and direct dynamic assemblies. The latter relies on the spontaneous adsorption of particles at fluid interfaces to modify the interfacial energy, rheology, and permeability of biphasic materials. Here, we address two key questions that connect these otherwise distinct fields of study. How do liquid interfaces influence the dynamics of active or driven colloidal particles? How can particle activity influence the dynamics of liquid interfaces? These questions motivate the pursuit of active particle surfactants that move and organize at fluid interfaces to perform useful functions such as enhancing mass transport or modulating interfacial properties. Drawing examples from the literature, we discuss how fluid interfaces can provide a unique environment for the study of active colloids, how surface tension can be harnessed to propel particle motions, and how capillary interactions can be activated to achieve dynamically tunable emulsions and foams. We highlight opportunities for the future study and application of active particles at liquid interfaces.  相似文献   

3.
We present microscopy studies of particle-stabilized emulsions with unconventional morphologies. The emulsions comprise pairs of partially miscible fluids and are stabilized by colloids. Alcohol-oil mixtures are employed; silica colloids are chemically modified so that they have partial wettability. We create our morphologies by two distinct routes: starting with a conventional colloid-stabilized emulsion or starting in the single-fluid phase with the colloids dispersed. In the first case temperature cycling leads to the creation of extended fluid domains built around some of the initial fluid droplets. In the second case quenching into the demixed region leads to the formation of domains which reflect the demixing kinetics. The structures are stable due to a jammed, semisolid, multilayer of colloids on the liquid-liquid interface. The differing morphologies reflect the roles in formation of the arrested state of heterogeneous and homogeneous nucleation and spinodal decomposition. The latter results in metastable, bicontinuous emulsions with frozen interfaces, at least for the thin-slab samples, investigated here.  相似文献   

4.
The potential of mean force for uncharged macroparticles suspended in a fluid confined by a wall or a narrow pore is computed for solvent-wall and solvent-macroparticle interactions with attractive forces. Bridge functions taken from Rosenfeld's density-functional theory are used in the reference hypernetted chain closure of the Ornstein-Zernike integral equations. The quality of this closure is assessed by comparison with simulation. As an illustration, the role of solvation forces is investigated. When the "residual" attractive tails are given a range appropriate to "hard sphere-like" colloids, the unexpected role of solvation forces previously observed in bulk colloids is confirmed in the confinement situation.  相似文献   

5.
Understanding the fundamental behavior of chemically anisotropic Janus and patchy particles at fluid interfaces enables utilization of these colloids as solid surfactants for stabilization of emulsions and as building blocks for fabrication of functional and responsive materials. Here, we review recent progress on understanding the combined effects of particle–interface and particle–particle interactions on the surface activity and organization of Janus and patchy particles at fluid interfaces. We also highlight recent developments that harness these fundamental properties for applications in self-assembly and emulsion stabilization, and discuss some of the outstanding questions that warrant future investigation. The progress in the field opens new opportunities to pursue techniques for controlling interfacial rheology, directed motion, and the formulation of novel soft materials.  相似文献   

6.
The forces and structures that develop at and between fluid interfaces are responsible for the stability of foam, emulsion and wetting films. Although these forces are less studied than the interactions occurring between solid surfaces, recent quantitative studies of films created between fluid interfaces are providing new information that both complements previous findings obtained with solid surfaces, and reveals unique and important differences for films confined between fluid interfaces. Noteworthy is that fluid interfaces can be much more mobile, thus fluctuations and interfacial boundary conditions can produce a rich variety of phenomena at these interfaces.  相似文献   

7.
Colloids (colloidal particles or nanoparticles) and their in-situ characterizations are important topics in colloid and interface science. In-situ visualization of colloids with X-ray microscopy is a growing frontier. Here, after a brief introduction on the method, we focus on its application for identifying nanoscale wettability of colloidal particles at fluid interfaces, which is a critical factor in colloidal self-assembly. We discuss a quantitative study on colloidal wettability with two microscopic methods: (i) X-ray microscopy by visualizing natural oil–water interfaces and (ii) confocal microscopy by visualizing fluorescently-labeled interfaces. Both methods show consistent estimation results in colloid–fluid interfacial tensions. This comparison strongly suggests a feasibility of X-ray microscopy as a promising in-situ protocol in colloid research, without fluorescent staining. Finally, we address a prospect of X-ray imaging for colloid and interface science.  相似文献   

8.
In situ AFM study of sorbed humic acid colloids at different pH   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Humic acid colloids adsorbed on the basal plane of cleaved muscovite are investigated under in situ conditions by non-contact mode atomic force microscopy (AFM) in liquid (also called fluid tapping-mode AFM). Structures are found to be of nanometer scale, consisting of flat particles (8–13 nm in diameter), aggregates of particles (20–100 nm), chain-like assemblies, networks and torus-like structures. In contrast to former investigations colloids are investigated in aquatic solution and structures are not influenced by sample preparation. Nanostructure, surface coverage and particle sizes are found to depend on solution pH. Humic colloids can be distinguished from surface roughness and background noise by image processing. Furthermore, an approach to quantify the surface coverage is discussed. Therefore, non-contact mode AFM in liquid is shown to be a powerful method to study the interaction of colloids at solid–liquid interfaces.  相似文献   

9.
The surface activities of lysozyme and dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPPC) vesicles at aqueous/compressed fluid interfaces are examined via high-pressure interfacial tension measurements using the pendant drop technique. The density and interfacial tension in compressible fluid systems vary significantly with pressure, providing a versatile medium for elucidating interactions between biomolecules and fluid interfaces and a method to elicit pressure-dependent interfacial morphological responses. The effects of lysozyme concentration (0.0008, 0.01, and 1 mg/mL) and pressure (> or = 7 MPa) on the dynamic surface response in the presence of ethane, propane, N2, and CO2 at 298 K were examined. Interfacial lysozyme adsorption reduced the induction phase and quickly led to interfacial tensions consistent with protein conformational changes and monolayer saturation at the compressed fluid interfaces. Protein adsorption, as indicated by surface pressure, correlated with calculated Hamaker constants for the compressed gases, denoting the importance of dispersion interactions. For DPPC at aqueous/compressed or aqueous/supercritical CO2 interfaces (1.8-20.7 MPa, 308 K), 2-3-fold reductions in interfacial tension were observed relative to the pure binary fluid system. The resulting surface pressures infer pressure-dependent morphological changes within the DPPC monolayer.  相似文献   

10.
We investigate the assembly of spherical and anisotropic colloidal particles with the shape of peanuts when subjected to an external alternating electric field. By varying the strength and frequency of the applied field, we observe that both types of particles form clusters at low frequencies due to attractive electrohydrodynamic interactions or disperse into a liquidlike phase at high frequencies due to repulsive dipolar interactions. We characterize the observed structures via pair correlation functions and radius of gyration, and observe a clear difference in the ordering process between the isotropic and anisotropic colloids. Further on, we interpret the cluster formation kinetics in terms of dynamic scaling theory, and observe a faster aggregation of the anisotropic colloids with respect to the isotropic ones.  相似文献   

11.
The manufacture of food dispersions (emulsions and foams) with specific quality attributes depends on the selection of the most appropriate raw materials and processing conditions. These dispersions being thermodynamically unstable require the use of emulsifiers (proteins, lipids, phospholipids, surfactants etc.). Emulsifiers typically coexist in the interfacial layer with specific functions in the processing and properties of the final product. The optimum use of emulsifiers depends on our knowledge of their interfacial physico-chemical characteristics - such as surface activity, amount adsorbed, structure, thickness, topography, ability to desorb (stability), lateral mobility, interactions between adsorbed molecules, ability to change conformation, interfacial rheological properties, etc. -, the kinetics of film formation and other associated physico-chemical properties at fluid interfaces. These monolayers constitute well defined systems for the analysis of food colloids at the micro- and nano-scale level, with several advantages for fundamental studies. In the present review we are concerned with the analysis of physico-chemical properties of emulsifier films at fluid interfaces in relation to foaming. Information about the above properties would be very helpful in the prediction of optimised formulations for food foams. We concluded that at surface pressures lower than that of monolayer saturation the foaming capacity is low, or even zero. A close relationship was observed between foaming capacity and the rate of diffusion of the foaming agent to the air-water interface. However, the foam stability correlates with the properties of the film at long-term adsorption.  相似文献   

12.
A mesoscale theory for the tensor order parameter Q is used to investigate the structures that arise when spherical nanoparticles are suspended in confined nematic liquid crystals (NLCs). The NLC is "sandwiched" between a wall and a small channel. The potential of mean force is determined between particles and the bottom of the channels or between several particles. Our results suggest that strong NLC-mediated interactions between the particles and the sidewalls of the channels, on the order of hundreds of k(B)T, arise when the colloids are inside the channels. The magnitude of the channel-particle interactions is dictated by a combination of two factors, namely, the type of defect structures that develop when a nanoparticle is inside a channel, and the degree of ordering of the nematic in the region between the colloid and the nanochannel. The channel-particle interactions become stronger as the nanoparticle diameter becomes commensurate with the nanochannel width. Nanochannel geometry also affects the channel-particle interactions. Among the different geometries considered, a cylindrical channel seems to provide the strongest interactions. Our calculations suggest that small variations in geometry, such as removing the sharp edges of the channels, can lead to important reductions in channel-particle interactions. Our calculations for systems of several nanoparticles indicate that linear arrays of colloids with Saturn ring defects, which for some physical conditions are not stable in a bulk system, can be stabilized inside the nanochannels. These results suggest that nanochannels and NLCs could be used to direct the assembly of nanoparticles into ordered arrays with unusual morphologies.  相似文献   

13.
Colloid attachment to liquid–gas interfaces is an important process used in industrial applications to separate suspended colloids from the fluid phase. Moving gas bubbles can also be used to remove colloidal dust from surfaces. Similarly, moving liquid–gas interfaces lead to colloid mobilization in the natural subsurface environment, such as in soils and sediments. The objective of this study was to quantify the effect of moving air–water interfaces on the detachment of colloids deposited on an air-dried glass surface, as a function of colloidal properties and interface velocity. We selected four types of polystyrene colloids (positive and negative surface charge, hydrophilic and hydrophobic). The colloids were deposited on clean microscope glass slides using a flow-through deposition chamber. Air–water interfaces were passed over the colloid-deposited glass slides, and we varied the number of passages and the interface velocity. The amounts of colloids deposited on the glass slides were visualized using confocal laser scanning microscopy and quantified by image analysis. Our results showed that colloids attached under unfavorable conditions were removed in significantly greater amounts than those attached under favorable conditions. Hydrophobic colloids were detached more than hydrophilic colloids. The effect of the air–water interface on colloid removal was most pronounced for the first two passages of the air–water interface. Subsequent passages of air–water interfaces over the colloid-deposited glass slides did not cause significant additional colloid removal. Increasing interface velocity led to decreased colloid removal. The force balances, calculated from theory, supported the experimental findings, and highlight the dominance of detachment forces (surface tension forces) over the attachment forces (DLVO forces).  相似文献   

14.
In this review the grafting of polymer chains to solid supports or interfaces and the subsequent impact on colloidal properties is examined. We start by examining theoretical models for densely grafted polymers (brushes), experimental techniques for their preparation and the properties of the ensuing structures. Our aim is to present a broad overview of the state of the art in this field, rather than an in-depth study. In the second section the interactions of surfaces with tethered polymers with the surrounding environment and the impact on colloidal properties are considered. Various theoretical models for such interactions are discussed. We then review the properties of colloids with tethered polymer chains, interactions between planar brushes and nanocolloids, interactions between brushes and biocolloids and the impact of grafted polymers on wetting properties of surfaces, using the ideas presented in the first section. The review closes with an outlook to possible new directions of research.  相似文献   

15.
This feature article describes recent advances in several areas of research involving the interfacial ordering of liquid crystals (LCs). The first advance revolves around the ordering of LCs at bio/chemically functionalized surfaces. Whereas the majority of past studies of surface-induced ordering of LCs have involved surfaces of solids that present a limited diversity of chemical functional groups (surfaces at which van der Waals forces dominate surface-induced ordering), recent studies have moved to investigate the ordering of LCs on chemically complex surfaces. For example, surfaces decorated with biomolecules (e.g., oligopeptides and proteins) and transition-metal ions have been investigated, leading to an understanding of the roles that metal-ligand coordination interactions, electrical double layers, acid-base interactions, and hydrogen bonding can play in the interfacial ordering of LCs. The opportunity to create chemically responsive LCs capable of undergoing ordering transitions in the presence of targeted molecular events (e.g., ligand exchange around a metal center) has emerged from these fundamental studies. A second advance has focused on investigations of the ordering of LCs at interfaces with immiscible isotropic fluids, particularly water. In contrast to prior studies of surface-induced ordering of LCs on solid surfaces, LC-aqueous interfaces are deformable and molecules at these interfaces exhibit high levels of mobility and thus can reorganize in response to changes in the interfacial environment. A range of fundamental investigations involving these LC-aqueous interfaces have revealed that (i) the spatial and temporal characteristics of assemblies formed from biomolecular interactions can be reported by surface-driven ordering transitions in the LCs, (ii) the interfacial phase behavior of molecules and colloids can be coupled to (and manipulated via) the ordering (and nematic elasticity) of LCs, and (iii) the confinement of LCs leads to unanticipated size-dependent ordering (particularly in the context of LC emulsion droplets). The third and final advance addressed in this article involves interactions between colloids mediated by LCs. Recent experiments involving microparticles deposited at the LC-aqueous interface have revealed that LC-mediated interactions can drive interfacial assemblies of particles through reversible ordering transitions (e.g., from 1D chains to 2D arrays with local hexagonal symmetry). In addition, recent single-nanoparticle measurements suggest that the ordering of LCs about nanoparticles differs substantially from micrometer-sized particles and that the interactions between nanoparticles mediated by the LCs are far weaker than predicted by theory (sufficiently weak that the interactions are reversible and thus enable self-assembly). Finally, LC-mediated interactions between colloidal particles have also been shown to lead to the formation of colloid-in-LC gels that possess mechanical properties relevant to the design of materials that interface with living biological systems. Overall, these three topics serve to illustrate the broad opportunities that exist to do fundamental interfacial science and discovery-oriented research involving LCs.  相似文献   

16.
Colloid sorption onto air-water interfaces in a variety of natural environments has been previously recognized, but better quantification and understanding is still needed. Affinities of clay colloids for the air-water interface were measured using a bubble-column method and reported as partition coefficients (K). Four types of dilute clay suspensions were measured in NaCl solutions under varying pH and ionic strength conditions: kaolinite KGa-1, illite IMt-2, montmorillonite SWy-2, and bentonite. The K values of three types of polystyrene latex particles with different surface-charge properties were also measured for comparison. Kaolinite exhibited extremely high affinity to the air-water interface at pH values below 7. Illite has lower affinity to air-water interfaces than kaolinite, but has similar pH dependence. Na-montmorillonite and bentonite clay were found excluded from the air-water interface at any given pH and ionic strength. Positively and negatively charged latex particles exhibited sorption and exclusion, respectively, at the air-water interface. These results show the importance of electrostatic interactions between the air-water interface and colloids, especially the influence of pH-dependent edge charges, and influence of particle shape.  相似文献   

17.
The evaporation of a drop of colloidal suspension pinned on a substrate usually results in a ring of particles accumulated at the periphery of the initial drop. Intense research has been devoted to understanding, suppressing and ultimately controlling this so‐called coffee‐ring effect (CRE). Although the crucial role of flow patterns in the CRE has been thoroughly investigated, the effect of interactions on this phenomenon has been largely neglected. This Concept paper reviews recent works in this field and shows that the interactions of colloids with (and at) liquid–solid and liquid–gas interfaces as well as bulk particle–particle interactions drastically affect the morphology of the deposit. General rules are established to control the CRE by tuning these interactions, and guidelines for the rational physicochemical formulation of colloidal suspensions capable of depositing particles in desirable patterns are provided. This opens perspectives for the reliable control of the CRE in real‐world formulations and creates new paradigms for flexible particle patterning at all kinds of interfaces as well for the exploitation of the CRE as a robust and inexpensive diagnostic tool.  相似文献   

18.
Electrostatic interactions between charged, distant colloids in a bulk electrolyte solution do not depend on the inherent structure of ions and a solvent forming a double layer. For charged colloids trapped at an interface between an electrolyte and air this no longer holds; as the electrostatic interactions are mediated via air and the field lines determining the interactions originate at the charged surface, these details come into prominence. Using the Langevin-Poisson-Boltzmann equation we investigate how steric effects and the polarization saturation of a solvent effect the contact potential at the colloid surface and, in consequence, the long range interactions between colloids trapped at an interface. For a surface charge 0.4 C m(-2) the combination of these effects can increase the interactions by up to ~40 times when compared to Poisson-Boltzmann calculations. The validity of these enhancement mechanisms is supported by recent experimental data (K. Masschaele et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., 2010, 105, 048303).  相似文献   

19.
We present computational results on the static properties of concentrated dispersions of bidisperse colloids. The long-range electrostatic interactions between dissimilar spherical colloids are determined using the singularity method, which provides rigorous solutions to the linearized electrostatic field. The NVT Monte Carlo simulation is applied to the bulk suspension to obtain the radial distribution function for the concentrated system. The increasing trend of osmotic pressure with increasing total particle concentration is reduced as the concentration ratio between large and small particles is increased. The increase of electrostatic interaction between similarly charged particles caused by the Debye screening effect provides an increase in the osmotic pressure. From the estimation of total structure factor, we observe the strong correlations developed between dissimilar spheres, and the small spheres are expected to tend to fit into the spaces between the larger ones. As the particle concentration increases at a given ionic strength, the magnitude of the first peak in structure factors increases and also moves to higher wavenumber values.  相似文献   

20.
The energy landscape picture of protein folding and binding is employed to optimize a number of pair potentials for direct and water-mediated interactions in protein complex interfaces. We find that water-mediated interactions greatly complement direct interactions in discriminating against various types of trap interactions that model those present in the cell. We highlight the context dependent nature of knowledge-based binding potentials, as contrasted with the situation for autonomous folding. By performing a Principal Component Analysis (PCA) of the corresponding interaction matrixes, we rationalize the strength of the recognition signal for each combination of the contact type and reference trap states using the differential in the idealized "canonical" amino acid compositions of native and trap layers. The comparison of direct and water-mediated contact potential matrixes emphasizes the importance of partial solvation in stabilizing charged groups in the protein interfaces. Specific water-mediated interresidue interactions are expected to influence significantly the kinetics as well as thermodynamics of protein association.  相似文献   

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