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1.
Nano Lett ; 24(28): 8717-8722, 2024 Jul 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38976791

ABSTRACT

Crystalline monolayers prevalent in nature and technology possess elusive elastic properties with important implications in fundamental physics, biology, and nanotechnology. Leveraging the recently discovered shape transitions of oil-in-water emulsion droplets, upon which these droplets adopt cylindrical shapes and elongate, we investigate the elastic characteristics of the crystalline monolayers covering their interfaces. To unravel the conditions governing Euler buckling and Brazier kink formation in these cylindrical tubular interfacial crystals, we strain the elongating cylindrical droplets within confining microfluidic wells. Our experiments unveil a nonclassical relation between the Young's modulus and the bending modulus of these crystals. Intriguingly, this relation varies with the radius of the cylindrical crystal, presenting a nonclassical mechanism for tuning of elasticity in nanotechnology applications.

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 621: 131-138, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35487043

ABSTRACT

HYPOTHESIS: The counterintuitive temperature-controlled self-faceting of water-suspended, surfactant-stabilized, liquid oil droplets provides new opportunities in engineering of smart liquids, the properties of which are controllable by external stimuli. However, many emulsions exhibiting self-faceting phenomena have limited stability due to surfactant precipitation. The emulsions' stability may be enhanced, and their inter-droplet electrostatic repulsion tuned, through controlled charge screening driven by varying-concentration added salts. Moreover, in many technologically-relevant situations, salts may already exist in the emulsion's aqueous phase. Yet, salts' impact on self-faceting effects has never been explored. We hypothesize that the self-faceting transitions' temperatures, and stability against surfactant precipitation, of ionic-surfactants-stabilized emulsions are significantly modified by salt introduction. EXPERIMENTS: We explore the temperature-dependent impact of NaCl and CsCl salt concentration on the emulsions' phase diagrams, employing optical microscopy of emulsion droplet shapes and interfacial tension measurements, both sensitive to interfacial phase transitions. FINDINGS: A salt concentration dependent increase in the self-faceting transition temperatures is found, and its mechanism elucidated. Our findings allow for a significant enhancement of the emulsions' stability, and provide the physical understanding necessary for future progress in research and applications of self-faceting phenomena in salt-containing emulsions.


Subject(s)
Salts , Sodium Chloride , Emulsions , Surface-Active Agents , Water
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