Organic-inorganic patchy particles as a versatile platform for fluid-in-fluid dispersion stabilisation
Publication date
2016
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
taverne
Abstract
We present a new class of organic-inorganic patchy particles for the efficient stabilization of Pickering foams and emulsions. Using solvent-based heterogeneous precipitation, we decorate inorganic silica particles with discrete domains of water insoluble plant protein (zein). By varying the extent of protein coverage on the silica surface, we tune the pH-dependent interactions of the particles and the interfaces. We observe an optimum foam stabilization, which is attributed to the creation of a slightly positive low effective surface potential from positively charged protein patches and the negatively charged silica surface. The effect of surface coverage on foam stability is in line with the predicted low interfacial potential of the patchy particles in water, which determines the energy of particle adsorption. In emulsions, the increase of the protein amount on the silica particles causes a progressive bridging of the oil droplets into a close-packing configuration due to gelation of the protein patches. Protein-based organic-inorganic surface heterogeneous particles represent a new versatile platform for the stabilization of fluid-in-fluid dispersions and as precursors for the assembly of advanced functional materials.
Keywords
Taverne, Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Citation
Blanco, E, Smoukov, S K, Velev, O D & Velikov, K P 2016, 'Organic-inorganic patchy particles as a versatile platform for fluid-in-fluid dispersion stabilisation', Faraday Discussions, vol. 191, pp. 73-88. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6fd00036c