Publications by authors named "Simon R Biggs"

The efficient encapsulation of small molecule active ingredients has been a challenge for many decades across many commercial applications. Recently, successful attempts to address this issue have included deposition of thin metal shells onto liquid filled polymer microcapsules or emulsion droplets to provide an impermeable barrier to diffusion. In this work we have developed a novel method to protect small molecule active ingredients by deposition of thin mineral shells.

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Current analytical models for sessile droplet evaporation do not consider the nonuniform temperature field within the droplet and can overpredict the evaporation by 20%. This deviation can be attributed to a significant temperature drop due to the release of the latent heat of evaporation along the air-liquid interface. We report, for the first time, an analytical solution of the sessile droplet evaporation coupled with this interfacial cooling effect.

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The influence of particle adsorption on liquid/liquid interfacial tension is not well understood, and much previous research has suggested conflicting behaviors. In this paper we investigate the surface activity and adsorption kinetics of charge stabilized and pH-responsive polymer stabilized colloids at oil/water interfaces using two tensiometry techniques: (i) pendant drop and (ii) microtensiometer. We found, using both techniques, that charge stabilized particles had little or no influence on the (dynamic) interfacial tension, although dense silica particles affected the "apparent" measured tension in the pendent drop, due to gravity driven elongation of the droplet profile.

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Printing of droplets of pure solvents containing suspended solids typically leads to a ring stain due to convective transport of the particles toward the contact line during evaporation of the solvent. In mixtures of volatile solvents, recirculating cells driven by surface tension gradients are established that lead to migration of colloidal particles toward the center of the droplet. In favorable cases, a dense disk of particles forms with a diameter much smaller than that of the droplet.

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The free adsorption of an end-functionalised weak polybase, poly dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate (pDMAEMA), on the surface of colloidal gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) as a route to produce a responsive core-shell nanoparticle is explored here. Optimal conditions for the physisorption of the polymeric chains onto the colloidal nanoparticles are explored. A dense coverage is facilitated by rapidly mixing the well solvated pH responsive homopolymer, at low pH, into a relatively poor solvent environment, at higher pH, containing a stable dispersion of charge-stabilised gold nanoparticles.

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The kinetics of drop penetration were studied by filming single drops of several different fluids (water, PEG200, PEG600, and HPC solutions) as they penetrated into loosely packed beds of glass ballotini, lactose, zinc oxide, and titanium dioxide powders. Measured times ranged from 0.45 to 126 s and depended on the powder particle size, viscosity, surface tensions, and contact angle.

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