We have studied the coalescence of oil in water emulsions under the influence of gravity. The emulsions were made with alkane oils and surfactants with varying physical chemistry. We chose cationic alkyl trimethylammonium bromides of different chain lengths and nonionic surfactants of ethylene oxide and sugar head groups, including polymeric surfactants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present a study of moderately stable dilute emulsions. These emulsions are models for water contaminated by traces of oil encountered in many water treatment situations. The purification of water and the elimination of oil rely on the emulsion stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2023
Coarsening of two-phase systems is crucial for the stability of dense particle packings such as alloys, foams, emulsions, or supersaturated solutions. Mean field theories predict an asymptotic scaling state with a broad particle size distribution. Aqueous foams are good model systems for investigations of coarsening-induced structures, because the continuous liquid as well as the dispersed gas phases are uniform and isotropic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report foam coarsening studies which were performed in the International Space Station (ISS) to suppress drainage due to gravity. Foams and bubbly liquids with controlled liquid fractions between 15 and 50% were investigated to study the transition between bubble growth laws previously reported near the dry limit → 0 and the dilute limit → 1 (Ostwald ripening). We determined the coarsening rates for the driest foams and the bubbly liquids, they are in close agreement with theoretical predictions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this perspective paper, we highlight the numerous open problems in the topic of stability of emulsions and foams, focusing on the simplest case of dispersions stabilized by surfactants. There are three main destabilization processes, gravity induced evolution, Ostwald ripening, and drops or bubble coalescence, which are analyzed separately. The discussion is restricted to the case of Newtonian fluids, deprived of microstructure, except for the presence of micelles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mechanical properties of lipid monolayers and their responses to shear and compression stresses play an important role in processes such as breathing and eye blinking. We studied the mechanical properties of Langmuir monolayers of a model mixture, composed of an unsaturated lipid, 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl--glycero-phosphoethanolamine (POPE), and a saturated lipid, 1,2-dipalmitoyl--glycero-phosphocholine (DPPC). We performed isothermal compressions and sinusoidal shear deformations of these mixed monolayers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Colloid Interface Sci
January 2020
This short review describes the work on aqueous foam film stability with the important past contributions of Dotchi Exerowa and Dimo Platikanov, together with advances from other research groups. The review is focused on film rupture, for which few controlled experiments can be found in the literature and as a consequence, our understanding is still limited. The work on rupture of films in foams is described, together with the correlations with the rupture of isolated films.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe coarsening of quasi-2D wet foams is well described theoretically by the model of Schimming and Durian, that takes into account the diffusion through the Plateau borders and the vertices in a rigorous manner. In this article, we describe an experimental study of coarsening in which the foam film permeability is measured in such quasi-2D wet foams. We first performed a full characterization of the structure of the studied foams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the dynamics of a cationic surfactant monolayer, Gemini 12-2-12, at the air?water interface for surfactant aqueous solutions at concentrations below the critical micelle concentration. We present surface rheology experiments performed in a Langmuir trough by the oscillatory barrier technique. From these, we found negative surface viscosities at certain frequencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile coalescence is ultimately the most drastic destabilization process in foams, its underlying processes are still unclear. To better understand them, we track individual coalescence events in two-dimensional foams at controlled capillary pressure. We obtain statistical information revealing the influence of the different parameters which have been previously proposed to explain coalescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have studied emulsions made with two- and three-phase oil-water-surfactant systems in which one of the phases is a microemulsion, the other phases being water or/and oil excess phases. Such systems have been extensively studied in the 1970-1980s for applications in enhanced oil recovery. It was found at that time that the emulsions became very unstable in the three-phase systems, but so far few explanations have been proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA central challenge for the safe design of nanomaterials (NMs) is the inherent variability of NM properties, both as produced and as they interact with and evolve in, their surroundings. This has led to uncertainty in the literature regarding whether the biological and toxicological effects reported for NMs are related to specific NM properties themselves, or rather to the presence of impurities or physical effects such as agglomeration of particles. Thus, there is a strong need for systematic evaluation of the synthesis and processing parameters that lead to potential variability of different NM batches and the reproducible production of commonly utilized NMs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen surfactants adsorb at liquid interfaces, they not only decrease the surface tension, they confer rheological properties to the interfaces. There are two types of rheological parameters associated to interfacial layers: compression and shear. The elastic response is described by a storage modulus and the dissipation by a loss modulus or equivalently a surface viscosity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoamed emulsions are ubiquitous in our daily life but the ageing of such systems is still poorly understood. In this study we investigate foam drainage and measure the evolution of the gas, liquid and oil volume fractions inside the foam. We evidence three regimes of ageing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the stability of foams containing small bubbles (radius ≲ 50 μm). The foams are made from aqueous surfactant solutions containing various amounts of glycerol. The foams start breaking at their top, when the liquid volume fraction has decreased sufficiently during liquid drainage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Colloid Interface Sci
June 2017
We review the coarsening process of foams made with various surfactants and gases, focusing on physico-chemical aspects. Several parameters strongly affect coarsening: foam liquid fraction and foam film permeability, this permeability depending on the surfactant used. Both parameters may evolve with time: the liquid fraction, due to gravity drainage, and the film permeability, due to the decrease of capillary pressure during bubble growth, and to the subsequent increase in film thickness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe stability of foams made with sponge phases (L3 phases) and lamellar phases (L(α) phases), both containing surfactant bilayers, has been investigated. The extreme stability of foams made with lamellar phases seems essentially due to the high viscosity of the foaming solution, which slows down gravity drainage. Moreover, the foams start draining only when the buoyancy stress overcomes the yield stress of the L(α) phase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe show that, while the gelation of colloidal silica proceeds much faster in the presence of added KCl than NaCl, the final gels are very similar in structure and properties. We have studied the gelation process by visual inspection and by small angle X-ray scattering for a range of salt and silica particle concentrations. The characteristic times of the early aggregation process and the formation of a stress-bearing structure with both salts are shown to collapse onto master curves with single multiplicative constants, linked to the stability ratio of the colloidal suspensions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe review the existing literature on asphaltenes at various types of interfaces: oil-water, air-water, gas-oil and solid-liquid, with more emphasis on the oil-water interfaces. We address the role of asphaltene aggregation, recently clarified for asphaltenes in bulk by the Yen-Mullins model. We discuss the questions of adsorption reversibility and interfacial rheology, especially in connection with emulsion stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrastable foams are made very simply by adding salt (NaCl or KCl) to sodium dodecyl sulfate. The addition of high concentrations of salt leads to the precipitation of the surfactant on the bubble surfaces and as crystals in the interstices between the bubbles. As a consequence, the ageing of the foams is stopped to make them stable indefinitely, or until they are heated above the melting temperature of the crystals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntifoams are widely used to control or to avoid foam production. In order to work, antifoam particles need to break foam films efficiently, which many antifoams do very well. However, once they have broken a film, to continue to be effective they need to be transported to the next film.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
April 2015
Quasi-two-dimensional (quasi-2D) foams consist of monolayers of bubbles squeezed between two narrowly spaced plates. These simplified foams have served successfully in the past to shed light on numerous issues in foam physics. Here we consider the electrical conductivity of such model foams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe address the rheology of assemblies of surfactant-decorated silica nanoparticles irreversibly adsorbed at the gas/liquid interface. Positively charged surfactant molecules (such as CTAB) bind to silica nanoparticle surfaces, and the resulting particle-surfactant complexes adsorb at gas/liquid interfaces. The surfactant molecules control the wettability of such decorated nanoparticles and their adsorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
July 2015
We describe forced drainage experiments of foams made with model surfactant solutions with different surface rheology. We analyze the origin of two distinct drainage transitions reported in the literature, between regimes where the bubble surfaces are mobile or rigid. We propose that both transitions are related to the surface shear viscosity and to its shear thinning behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Colloid Interface Sci
August 2015
The paper discusses adsorption and desorption energy barriers for macroscopic interfaces of surfactant solutions. Literature data suggest that adsorption and desorption are not always fully diffusion controlled. Apart from electrostatic barriers that lead to strong deviations, other types of barriers are less easy to identify, because smaller deviations from diffusion controlled mechanisms are evidenced.
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