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1.
Soft Matter ; 20(9): 2032-2039, 2024 Feb 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38334987

RESUMO

A methodology to manipulate bubbles and measure adhesion forces is presented and validated. Holographic optical tweezers are employed to establish a circular array of high intensity points to effectively trap a gas bubble within a liquid medium. This approach includes an efficient calibration protocol based on a theoretical framework for the calculation of optical forces using a ray tracing algorithm, which allows enhancing the versatility of optical manipulation to micro-objects with a lower refractive index than the surrounding medium. As an initial application, the adhesion force between two stable bubbles at different sizes is measured, finding a minimum when they have the same diameter.

2.
Phys Rev Lett ; 116(12): 128302, 2016 Mar 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27058106

RESUMO

We studied the stability of foams containing small bubbles (radius ≲ 50 µm). The foams are made from aqueous surfactant solutions containing various amounts of glycerol. The foams start breaking at their top, when the liquid volume fraction has decreased sufficiently during liquid drainage. Unlike in foams with larger bubbles, the liquid fraction at which the foam destabilizes is surprisingly high. In order to interpret this observation we propose that film rupture occurs during reorganization events (T1) induced by bubble coarsening, which is particularly rapid in the case of small bubbles. New films are therefore formed rapidly and if their thickness is too small, they cannot be sufficiently covered by surfactant and they break. Using literature data for the duration of T1 events and the thickness of the new films, we show that this mechanism is consistent with the behavior of the foams studied.

3.
Soft Matter ; 12(5): 1459-67, 2016 Feb 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26647140

RESUMO

The stability of foams made with sponge phases (L3 phases) and lamellar phases (L(α) phases), both containing surfactant bilayers, has been investigated. The extreme stability of foams made with lamellar phases seems essentially due to the high viscosity of the foaming solution, which slows down gravity drainage. Moreover, the foams start draining only when the buoyancy stress overcomes the yield stress of the L(α) phase. The bubble growth associated with gas transfer is unusual: it follows a power law with an exponent smaller than those corresponding to Ostwald ripening (wet foams) and to coarsening (dry foams). The foams made with sponge phases are in turn very unstable, even less stable than pure surfactant foams made with glycerol solutions having the same viscosity. The fact that the surfactant bilayers in the sponge phase have a negative Gaussian curvature could facilitate bubble coalescence.

4.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci ; 244: 124-131, 2017 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26687804

RESUMO

We review the coarsening process of foams made with various surfactants and gases, focusing on physico-chemical aspects. Several parameters strongly affect coarsening: foam liquid fraction and foam film permeability, this permeability depending on the surfactant used. Both parameters may evolve with time: the liquid fraction, due to gravity drainage, and the film permeability, due to the decrease of capillary pressure during bubble growth, and to the subsequent increase in film thickness. Bubble coalescence may enhance the bubble's growth rate, in which case the bubble polydispersity increases. The differences found between the experiments reported in the literature and between experiments and theories are discussed.

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