| Literature DB >> 26733673 |
Shani Guttman1, Zvi Sapir1, Moty Schultz1, Alexander V Butenko1, Benjamin M Ocko2, Moshe Deutsch1, Eli Sloutskin3.
Abstract
Liquid droplets, widely encountered in everyday life, have no flat facets. Here we show that water-dispersed oil droplets can be reversibly temperature-tuned to icosahedral and other faceted shapes, hitherto unreported for liquid droplets. These shape changes are shown to originate in the interplay between interfacial tension and the elasticity of the droplet's 2-nm-thick interfacial monolayer, which crystallizes at some T = Ts above the oil's melting point, with the droplet's bulk remaining liquid. Strikingly, at still-lower temperatures, this interfacial freezing (IF) effect also causes droplets to deform, split, and grow tails. Our findings provide deep insights into molecular-scale elasticity and allow formation of emulsions of tunable stability for directed self-assembly of complex-shaped particles and other future technologies.Entities:
Keywords: emulsions; membranes' buckling; spontaneous emulsification; topological defects; two-dimensional crystals
Year: 2016 PMID: 26733673 PMCID: PMC4725478 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1515614113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205