(447c) Film Climbing of Particle-Laden Interfaces
AIChE Annual Meeting
2007
2007 Annual Meeting
Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
Solid-Liquid Interfaces
Wednesday, November 7, 2007 - 1:10pm to 1:30pm
We document a remarkable phenomenon in which coalescence of an oil/water/particle Pickering emulsion contained in a vial induces a particle film to climb up the walls of the vial. While this has been noted previously with nanoparticles, we show that such film-climbing is highly general and can be induced by a variety of particle types, particle sizes ranging from a few nm to a few microns, and different emulsion types. Many of the features of film growth described previously with nm-sized particles are found to remain true even with the far larger particles studied here. Binks et al., Langmuir, 22, 4100, 2006, have postulated that the particle films that climb up the walls of a vial are actually comprised of one oil layer and one water layer, with particles adsorbed at the interface between them. We confirm this ?sandwich? structure experimentally and also show that such interfacially-adsorbed particles can easily exert the very modest surface pressure necessary to sustain the weight of the film. Our experiments highlight the importance of prewetting the walls of the vials; films do not climb unless the walls are prewetted. Finally, while some climbing films are tightly-packed particle monolayers, tight packing is not essential; even sparsely-populated monolayers can display film climbing.