4.8 Article

Dynamically reconfigurable complex emulsions via tunable interfacial tensions

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NATURE
卷 518, 期 7540, 页码 520-524

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature14168

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资金

  1. Eni S.p.A. under Eni-MIT Alliance Solar Frontiers Program
  2. US Army Research Laboratory
  3. US Army Research Office through Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies [W911NF-13-D-0001]
  4. F32 Ruth L. Kirschtein NRSA Fellowships [EB014682, GM106550]

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Emulsification is a powerful, well-known technique for mixing and dispersing immiscible components within a continuous liquid phase. Consequently, emulsions are central components of medicine, food and performance materials. Complex emulsions, including Janus droplets (that is, droplets with faces of differing chemistries) and multiple emulsions, are of increasing importance' in pharmaceuticals and medical diagnostics', in the fabrication of microparticles and capsules' for food', in chemical separations', in cosmetics', and in dynamic optics'. Because complex emulsion properties and functions are related to the droplet geometry and composition, the development of rapid, simple fabrication approaches allowing precise control over the droplets' physical and chemical characteristics is critical. Significant advances in the fabrication of complex emulsions have been made using a number of procedures, ranging from largescale, less precise techniques that give compositional heterogeneity using high-shear mixers and membranes'', to small-volume but more precise microfluidic methodsn'''. However, such approaches have yet to create droplet morphologies that can be controllably altered after emulsification. Reconfigurable complex liquids potentially have great utility as dynamically tunable materials. Here we describe an approach to the one-step fabrication of three- and four-phase complex emulsions with highly controllable and reconfigurable morphologies. The fabrication makes use of the temperature-sensitive miscibility of hydrocarbon, silicone and fluorocarbon liquids, and is applied to both the microfluidic and the scalable batch production of complex droplets. We demonstrate that droplet geometries can be alternated between encapsulated and Janus configurations by varying the interfacial tensions using hydrocarbon and fluorinated surfactants including stimuli-responsive and cleavable surfactants. This yields a generalizable strategy for the fabrication of multiphase emulsions with controllably reconfigurable morphologies and the potential to create a wide range of responsive materials.

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