Colloidal jamming at interfaces: a route to fluid-bicontinuous gels
- PMID: 16195456
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1116589
Colloidal jamming at interfaces: a route to fluid-bicontinuous gels
Abstract
Colloidal particles or nanoparticles, with equal affinity for two fluids, are known to adsorb irreversibly to the fluid-fluid interface. We present large-scale computer simulations of the demixing of a binary solvent containing such particles. The newly formed interface sequesters the colloidal particles; as the interface coarsens, the particles are forced into close contact by interfacial tension. Coarsening is markedly curtailed, and the jammed colloidal layer seemingly enters a glassy state, creating a multiply connected, solidlike film in three dimensions. The resulting gel contains percolating domains of both fluids, with possible uses as, for example, a microreaction medium.
Comment in
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Chemistry. New gels for mixing immiscible liquids.Science. 2005 Sep 30;309(5744):2174-5. doi: 10.1126/science.1118123. Science. 2005. PMID: 16195449 No abstract available.
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