Life at ultralow interfacial tension: wetting, waves and droplets in demixed colloid-polymer mixtures

Publication date

2008

Authors

Lekkerkerker, HenkISNI 0000000123515195
de Villeneuve, V.W.A.ISNI 0000000388992309
De Folter, Julius W.J.ISNI 000000039625682X
Schmidt, M.
Hennequin, Y.
Bonn, D.
Indekeu, J.O.
Aarts, D.G.A.L.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

DOI

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Mixtures of colloids and polymers display a rich phase behavior, involving colloidal gas (rich in polymer, poor in colloid), colloidal liquid (poor in polymer, rich in colloid) and colloidal crystal phases (poor in polymer, highly ordered colloids). Recently, the colloidal gas-colloidal liquid interface received considerable attention as well. Due to the colloidal length scale the interfacial tension is much lower than in the atomic or molecular analog (nN/m instead of mN/m). This ultra-low interfacial tension has pronounced effects on the kinetics of phase separation, the colloidal gas-liquid profile near a single wall and the thermally induced fluctuations of the interface. The amplitudes of these thermally excited capillary waves are restrained by the interfacial tension and are for that reason of the order of the particle diameter. Therefore, in molecular systems, the capillary waves can only be seen indirectly in scattering experiments. In colloidal systems, however, the wave amplitudes are on a (sub) micrometer scale. This fact enables the direct observation of capillary waves in both real space and real time using confocal scanning laser microscopy. Moreover, the real space technique enables us to demonstrate the strong influence of interface fluctuations on droplet coalescence and droplet break up.

Keywords

Citation

Lekkerkerker, H N W, de Villeneuve, V W A, de Folter, J W J, Schmidt, M, Hennequin, Y, Bonn, D, Indekeu, J O & Aarts, D G A L 2008, 'Life at ultralow interfacial tension: wetting, waves and droplets in demixed colloid-polymer mixtures', European physical journal. B, condensed matter physics, vol. 64, no. 3-4, pp. 341-347.