Issue 44, 2015

Lateral capillary interactions between colloids beneath an oil–water interface that are driven by out-of-plane electrostatic double-layer interactions

Abstract

We study the lateral capillary interactions between colloids beneath an oil–water interface that lead to closely packed two-dimensional self-assembled colloidal crystals. These capillary forces are caused by the overlap of deformed interfaces above colloids on a solid substrate. The interface deformation is due to the electrostatic disjoining pressure between the charged particles and the charged oil–water interface. It is notable that the short-range (i.e., on the nanometer scale) and out-of-plane electrostatic double-layer interactions, which occur through an aqueous phase, can generate the long-range lateral capillary attraction (i.e., on the micrometer scale).

Graphical abstract: Lateral capillary interactions between colloids beneath an oil–water interface that are driven by out-of-plane electrostatic double-layer interactions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Aug 2015
Accepted
09 Sep 2015
First published
09 Sep 2015
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 8701-8706

Author version available

Lateral capillary interactions between colloids beneath an oil–water interface that are driven by out-of-plane electrostatic double-layer interactions

B. J. Park, M. Lee, B. Lee and E. M. Furst, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 8701 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM02001H

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