Adv Colloid Interface Sci
May 2022
As a foam film formed from complex fluids thins, the particles under the film confinement self-organize into layers. Reflected light was used to monitor the rate of layer-by-layer thinning and the layers' thickness. The microscopic and macroscopic films thin using the same stepwise manner (stratify), via layers or stripes with equal thicknesses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
December 2018
Surfactant solutions containing polymeric nanoparticles have been shown to have an improved wetting and spreading on solid surfaces. In this work, we explored the effect of the polymeric nanoparticles on the frictional coefficient at the three-phase contact region by studying polymeric nanofluids displacing oil in capillaries. Our results show polymeric nanoparticles can reduce the frictional coefficient by as much as four times by forming structured layers in the confined wedge film.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
September 2018
Our recent experiments have demonstrated that when a bubble rises through a nanofluid (a liquid containing dispersed nanoparticles) in a vertical tube, a nanofluidic film with several particle layers is formed between the gas bubble and the glass tube wall, which significantly changes the bubble velocity due to the nanoparticle layering phenomenon in the film. We calculated the structural nanofilm viscosity as a function of the number of particle layers confined in it and found that the film viscosity increases rather steeply when the film contains only one or two particle layers. The nanofilm viscosity was found to be several times higher than the bulk viscosity of the fluid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
April 2018
When a single bubble moves at a very low capillary number (10) through a liquid with dispersed nanoparticles (nanofluid) inside a vertical tube/capillary, a film is formed between the bubble surface and the tube wall and the nanoparticles self-layer inside the confined film. We measured the film thickness using reflected light interferometry. We calculated the film structural energy isotherm vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe motion of air bubbles in tubes filled with aqueous suspensions of nanoparticles (nanofluids) is of practical interest for bubble jets, lab-on-a-chip, and transporting media. Therefore, the focus of this study is the dynamics of air bubbles rising in a tube in a nanofluid. Many authors experimentally and analytically proposed that the velocity of rising air bubbles is constant for long air bubbles suspended in a vertical tube in common liquids (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the results of our studies on the changes in the contact angle and interfacial tension using a nanofluid composed of silica nanoparticles dispersed in water on three different solid substrates: gold (partially hydrophobic), glass (hydrophilic), and a silicon wafer (hydrophilic). We used both the goniometric method and drop-shape analysis to make the measurements. On the basis of the results of the drop-shape analysis using the Laplace equation, we evaluated the contributions of the interfacial tension change to the equilibrium contact angle and the presence of nanoparticles near the solid substrate, thereby elucidating the change in the wettability of the solid substrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent studies on the spreading phenomena of liquid dispersions of nanoparticles (nanofluids) have revealed that the self-layering and two-dimensional structuring of nanoparticles in the three-phase contact region exert structural disjoining pressure, which drives the spreading of nanofluids by forming a continuous wedge film between the liquid (e.g., oil) and solid surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanofluids have enhanced thermophysical properties compared to fluids without nanoparticles. Recent experiments have clearly shown that the presence of nanoparticles enhances the spreading of nanofluids. We report here the results of our experiments on the spreading of nanofluids comprising 5, 10, and 20 vol % silica suspensions of 19 nm particles displacing a sessile drop placed on a glass surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe phenomenon of particles being "driven up the wall" of a vessel by bursting bubbles at an air-water interface covered with hydrophobic nanoparticles is reported. Experiments have shown that the bubbles bursting at the interface give rise to the local surface pressure gradient, which pushes the particles to climb and coat the walls of the vessel. A theoretical model based on the lubrication approach to estimate the height and speed at which the particle layers climb up the walls yields values that are in fair agreement with the experimental measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
December 2004
This paper discusses the role of the structural disjoining pressure exerted by nanoparticles on the spreading of a liquid film containing these particles. The origin of the structural disjoining pressure in a confined geometry is due to the layering of the particles normal to the confining plane and has already been traced to the net increase in the entropy of the system in previous studies. In a recent paper, Wasan and Nikolov (Nature, 423 (2003) 156) pointed out that the structural component of the disjoining pressure is strong enough to move a liquid wedge; this casts a new light on many applications-most notably, detergency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSuspensions of nanometre-sized particles (nanofluids) are used in a variety of technological contexts. For example, their spreading and adhesion behaviour on solid surfaces can yield materials with desirable structural and optical properties. Similarly, the spreading behaviour of nanofluids containing surfactant micelles has implications for soil remediation, oily soil removal, lubrication and enhanced oil recovery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe spontaneous spreading (called superspreading) of aqueous trisiloxane ethoxylate surfactant solutions on hydrophobic solid surfaces is a fascinating phenomenon with several practical applications. For example, the ability of trisiloxane ethoxylate surfactants to enhance the spreading of spray solutions on waxy weed leaf surfaces, such as velvetleaf (Abutilion theophrasti), makes them excellent wetting agents for herbicide applications. The superspreading ability of silicone surfactants has been known for decades, but its mechanism is still not well understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
August 2001
Thin liquid films containing colloidal particles are considered to be the key structural elements of three-phase foams containing liquid, gas, and colloidal particles. This study is aimed at understanding the stability of such films in the absence of any surfactants. The particles form a layered structure in the film and produce a stepwise thinning in the thin liquid films.
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