4.6 Article

Skinny emulsions take on granular matter

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 14, Issue 36, Pages 7310-7323

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8sm00830b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [307280-POMCAPS]
  2. French National Research Agency as part of the 'Investments for the future' program
  3. German Research Foundation (DFG) through Forschergruppe Geometry and Physics of Spatial Random Systems'' (GPSRS) [FOR1548]
  4. German Research Foundation (DFG) through Cluster of Excellence Engineering of Advanced Material

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Our understanding of the structural features of foams and emulsions has advanced significantly over the last 20 years. However, with a search for super-stable'' liquid dispersions, foam and emulsion science employs increasingly complex formulations which create solid-like visco-elastic layers at the bubble/drop surfaces. These lead to elastic, adhesive and frictional forces between bubbles/drops, impacting strongly how they pack and deform against each other, asking for an adaptation of the currently available structural description. The possibility to modify systematically the interfacial properties makes these dispersions ideal systems for the exploration of soft granular materials with complex interactions. We present here a first systematic analysis of the structural features of such a system using a model silicone emulsion containing millimetre-sized polyethylene glycol drops (PEG). Solid-like drop surfaces are obtained by polymeric cross-linking reactions at the PEG-silicone interface. Using a novel droplet-micromanipulator, we highlight the presence of elastic, adhesive and frictional interactions between two drops. We then provide for the first time a full tomographic analysis of the structural features of these emulsions. An in-depth analysis of the angle of repose, local volume fraction distributions, pair correlation functions and the drop deformations for different skin formulations allow us to put in evidence the striking difference with ordinary'' emulsions having fluid-like drop surfaces. While strong analogies with frictional hard-sphere systems can be drawn, these systems display a set of unique features due to the high deformability of the drops which await systematic exploration.

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