Brownian diffusion of a partially wetted colloid
- PMID: 26147846
- DOI: 10.1038/nmat4348
Brownian diffusion of a partially wetted colloid
Abstract
The dynamics of colloidal particles at interfaces between two fluids plays a central role in microrheology, encapsulation, emulsification, biofilm formation, water remediation and the interface-driven assembly of materials. Common intuition corroborated by hydrodynamic theories suggests that such dynamics is governed by a viscous force lower than that observed in the more viscous fluid. Here, we show experimentally that a particle straddling an air/water interface feels a large viscous drag that is unexpectedly larger than that measured in the bulk. We suggest that such a result arises from thermally activated fluctuations of the interface at the solid/air/liquid triple line and their coupling to the particle drag through the fluctuation-dissipation theorem. Our findings should inform approaches for improved control of the kinetically driven assembly of anisotropic particles with a large triple-line-length/particle-size ratio, and help to understand the formation and structure of such arrested materials.
Comment in
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Colloids at interfaces: Pinned down.Nat Mater. 2015 Sep;14(9):869-70. doi: 10.1038/nmat4400. Nat Mater. 2015. PMID: 26288975 No abstract available.
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