Surfactant-free oil-in-water emulsions prepared with temperature and pH sensitive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide)(PNIPAM) microgel particles offer unprecedented control of emulsion stability.
The adsorption of poly(vinylamine) (PVA) on poly(styrene sulfate) latex particles is studied, and its consequences on the charging behavior and suspension stability are investigated. The adsorption process is assessed by batch depletion experiments and time-resolved electrophoretic mobility measurements. The adsorption of PVA appears to be basically irreversible. The rate of adsorption decreases with decreasing polymer dose. At low polymer dose, the polymer coverage corresponds to the amount of the polyelectrolyte added, while at high polymer dose, the polymer coverage saturates the surface. Stability ratios are determined by dynamic light scattering, and strongly depend on the polymer dose and salt level. The aggregation is rapid near the isoelectric point (IEP), and it slows down when moving away from it. The charge neutralization is highly nonstoichiometric with charging ratios (CR) larger than unity, meaning that several charges on an adsorbed polyelectrolyte chain are necessary to neutralize a single charge on the particle surface. By comparing the IEP for particles and polyelectrolytes of different charge densities, we find a strong dependence of the CR on the mismatch between the average distances between individual charges on the surface and on the polyelectrolyte. A simple model is proposed to explain this trend.
Using stimulus-sensitive microgel particles as an emulsifier, we have prepared a new type of emulsion responsive to pH, ionic strength, and temperature changes. Each of these environmental changes can trigger a volume phase transition in poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) microgel particles containing some carboxylic groups. Depending on their hydrophobicity and charging state, such PNIPAM microgel particles can adsorb to the droplets of an octanol-in-water emulsion and provide excellent stability against coalescence and ripening. We have studied in detail the correlation between the particles' response to changes in the solution conditions and the corresponding response of particle-decorated emulsion droplets. In their swollen, hydrophilic state, the microgel particles consistently stabilize the octanol droplets, but inducing a microgel collapse usually results in a destabilization of the emulsion and eventually in phase separation. A notable exception was found at high pH where particles are highly charged: in this regime emulsions remain stable even upon a temperatureinduced collapse of the microgel particles and prove sensitive only to high levels of screening ions. Microscopy studies of toluene-in-water emulsions stabilized by compact polystyrene particles of variable surface charge further suggest an intimate connection between the charge and packing density of interfacial particles and hint at a charge-induced interparticle attraction.
A combination of analytical methods and molecular modeling calculations has provided a detailed picture of the supramolecular and microscopic structure of precipitated lipophilic carotenoids. The nanoparticles have a core/shell structure (see schematic representation) in which the particle core (120 nm) consists of a variety of molecular aggregates of different sizes, and the shell (40 nm) consists of an adsorbed gelatin layer.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.