A subphase exchange cell was designed to observe fluid-fluid interfaces with a conventional optical microscope while simultaneously changing the subphase chemistry. Materials including phospholipids, asphaltenes, and nanoparticles at fluid-fluid interfaces exhibit unique morphological changes as a function of the bulk-phase chemistry. These changes can affect their interfacial material properties and, ultimately, the emergent bulk material properties of the films, foams, and emulsions produced from such interfacial systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdvances in synthesis of model 3D colloidal particles with exotic shapes and physical properties have enabled discovery of new 3D colloidal phases not observed in atomic systems, and simulations and quasi-2D studies suggest 2D colloidal systems have an even richer phase behavior. However, a model 2D (one-atom-thick) colloidal system has yet to be experimentally realized because of limitations in solution-phase exfoliation of 2D materials and other 2D particle fabrication technologies. Herein, we use a photolithography-based methodology to fabricate size- and shape-controlled monolayer graphene particles, and then transfer the particles to an air-water interface to study their dynamics and self-assembly in real-time using interference reflection microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInnovation: Interfacial rheological properties of complex fluid-fluid interfaces are strongly influenced by the film microstructure. Experimental investigations for correlating interfacial morphology and rheology are notoriously challenging. A miniaturized radial Langmuir trough was developed to study complex fluid-fluid interfaces under purely dilatational deformations that operates in tandem with a conventional inverted microscope for simultaneous interfacial visualization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonolayer particles of two-dimensional (2D) materials represent a scientifically and technologically interesting class of anisotropic particles with colloidal-scale lateral sizes but sub-nanometer thicknesses. This atomic-scale thickness leads to interesting phenomena that can be exploited in next-generation thin-film technologies, and fluid-fluid interfaces provide a potentially scalable platform to confine, assemble, and deposit functional thin films of 2D materials. However, directly observing how these materials interact and assemble into a given film morphology is experimentally challenging because of their sub-nanometer thicknesses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF