| Literature DB >> 28650575 |
Jing Fan1, Shin-Hyun Kim2, Zi Chen3, Shaobing Zhou4, Esther Amstad5, Tina Lin6, David A Weitz6.
Abstract
Compressed monodisperse emulsions in confined space exhibit highly ordered structures. The influence of the volume fraction and the confinement geometry on the organized structures is investigated and the mechanism by which structural transition occurs is studied. Based on the understanding of ordering behavior of compressed emulsions, a simple and high-throughput method to fabricate monodisperse polyhedral microgels using the emulsions as the template is developed. By controlling the geometry of the confined spaces, a variety of shapes such as hexagonal prism, Fejes Toth honeycomb prism, truncated octahedron, pyritohedron, and truncated hexagonal trapezohedron are implemented. Moreover, the edge sharpness of each shape is controllable by adjusting the drop volume fraction. This design principle can be readily extended to other shapes and materials, and therefore provides a useful means to create polyhedral microparticles for both fundamental study and practical applications.Entities:
Keywords: emulsions; hydrogel; microgels; nonspherical particles; packing structure
Year: 2017 PMID: 28650575 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201701256
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281