Direct measurement of surface interactions experienced by sticky microcapsules made from environmentally benign materials.

J Colloid Interface Sci

Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Case School of Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, United States.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the interactions of core-shell microcapsules with solid boundaries, focusing on the short-range potential energy well created by tethered forces.
  • The microcapsules, made of cinnamon oil and calcium alginate, were characterized in terms of size and surface charge, and their interactions with boundaries were measured using advanced imaging techniques.
  • Findings revealed that these microcapsules create a mild 'sticky' interaction with boundaries, suggesting potential benefits for their use in consumer products.

Article Abstract

We present a study combining experimental measurements, theoretical analysis, and simulations to investigate core-shell microcapsules interacting with a solid boundary, with a particular focus on understanding the short-range potential energy well arising from the tethered force. The microcapsules, fabricated using a Pickering emulsion template with a cinnamon oil core and calcium alginate shell, were characterized for size (∼5-6μm in diameter) and surface charge (∼-20mV). We employed total internal reflection microscopy and particle tracking to measure the microcapsule-boundary interactions and diffusion, from which potential energy and diffusivity profiles were derived. The potential energy profile characterizing the normal interaction was analyzed and simulated by considering electrostatic, gravitational, van der Waals, and tethered forces, while the lateral diffusivity was compared to that of a solid particle-boundary interaction, inclusive of hydrodynamic forces. The diffusivity was represented as a normalized diffusion coefficient to eliminate the impact of fluid viscosity. The normalized diffusion coefficient of polymer-shell microcapsules (∼0.02) was found to be an order of magnitude smaller than that of solid polystyrene particles (∼0.2). The microcapsule sampled a potential well consisting of two distinct minima, as observed experimentally and supported by analytical expressions and Brownian dynamics simulations. A critical tethered height h=46.3nm and the alginate radius of r=32.1nm were obtained from fitting our model to experimental data. This work concludes that these benign core-shell microcapsules interact with a nearby boundary via a transient tethering interaction, overall producing a mild 'sticky' interaction that would likely be beneficial for applications in consumer products.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2024.12.114DOI Listing

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