4.8 Article

Super-resolution microscopy on single particles at fluid interfaces reveals their wetting properties and interfacial deformations

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 11, Issue 14, Pages 6654-6661

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8nr08633h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dutch Science Foundation (NWO VIDI Grant) [723.014.006]
  2. European Union (ERC 2014 StG) [635928]
  3. Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science [024.001.035]

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Solid particles adsorbed at fluid interfaces are crucial for the mechanical stability of Pickering emulsions. The key parameter which determines the kinetic and thermodynamic properties of these colloids is the particle contact angle, theta. Several methods have recently been developed to measure the contact angle of individual particles adsorbed at liquid-liquid interfaces, as morphological and chemical heterogeneities at the particle surface can significantly affect theta. However, none of these techniques enables the simultaneous visualization of the nanoparticles and the reconstruction of the fluid interface to which they are adsorbed, in situ. To tackle this challenge, we utilize a newly developed super-resolution microscopy method, called iPAINT, which exploits non-covalent and continuous labelling of interfaces with photoactivatable fluorescent probes. Herewith, we resolve with nanometer accuracy both the position of individual nanoparticles at a water-octanol interface and the location of the interface itself. First, we determine single particle contact angles for both hydrophobic and hydrophilic spherical colloids. These experiments reveal a non-negligible dependence of theta on particle size, from which we infer an effective line tension, tau. Next, we image elliptical particles at a water-decane interface, showing that the corresponding interfacial deformations can be clearly captured by iPAINT microscopy.

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