Thin films made of deformable micro- and nano-units, such as biological membranes, polymer interfaces, and particle-laden liquid surfaces, exhibit a complex behavior during drying, with consequences for various applications like wound healing, coating technologies, and additive manufacturing. Studying the drying dynamics and structural changes of soft colloidal films thus holds the potential to yield valuable insights to achieve improvements for applications. In this study, interfacial monolayers of core-shell (CS) microgels with varying degrees of softness are employed as model systems and to investigate their drying behavior on differently modified solid substrates (hydrophobic vs hydrophilic).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA methodology to manipulate bubbles and measure adhesion forces is presented and validated. Holographic optical tweezers are employed to establish a circular array of high intensity points to effectively trap a gas bubble within a liquid medium. This approach includes an efficient calibration protocol based on a theoretical framework for the calculation of optical forces using a ray tracing algorithm, which allows enhancing the versatility of optical manipulation to micro-objects with a lower refractive index than the surrounding medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecently, colloids with an off-center fluorescent core and homogeneous composition have been developed to measure the rotational diffusivity of microparticles using 3D confocal microscopy in refractive index-matched suspensions. Here, we show that the same particles may be imaged using a standard fluorescence microscope to yield their rotational diffusion coefficients. Trajectories of the off-center core may be combined with known expressions for the correlation decay of particle orientations to determine an effective rotational diffusivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe underlying mechanisms and physics of catalytic Janus microswimmers is highly complex, requiring details of the associated phoretic fields and the physiochemical properties of catalyst, particle, boundaries, and the fuel used. Therefore, developing a minimal (and more general) model capable of capturing the overall dynamics of these autonomous particles is highly desirable. In the presented work, we demonstrate that a coarse-grained dissipative particle-hydrodynamics model is capable of describing the behaviour of various chemical microswimmer systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe assembly of colloidal particles at liquid/liquid or air/liquid interfaces is a versatile procedure to create microstructured monolayers and study their behavior under compression. When combined with soft and deformable particles such as microgels, compression is used to tune not only the interparticle distance but also the underlying microstructure of the monolayer. So far, the great majority of studies on microgel-laden interfaces are conducted after transfer to solid substrates, for example, Langmuir-Blodgett deposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe capillary interaction force between spherical Janus particles trapped at the air-water interface is measured using a time-sharing optical tweezer (bond number ≪ 1). One face of the particles is hydrophilic, and the other one, hydrophobic. Measured force goes from almost pure quadrupolar to almost pure hexapolar interaction due to the three-phase contact line corrugation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe radial attraction between microspheres straddling at the air/water interface (Bond number ≪1), whose origin is the irregular shape of the contact line and its concomitant distortion of the water surface, is measured using two light beams of a time-sharing optical tweezer. The colloidal particles used to make the measurements are microspheres made of hydrophobically covered silica to reduce the electrostatic interactions to a minimum. The measured radial force goes as a quadrupolar power law, r-n, with n = 5.
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