Elastic capsules at liquid-liquid interfaces
Jonas Hegemann, Horst-Holger Boltz, Jan Kierfeld

TL;DR
This paper studies how elastic microcapsules deform at liquid-liquid interfaces, revealing shape changes influenced by elasticity and surface tension, with implications for foam and emulsion stabilization.
Contribution
It provides a detailed numerical analysis of capsule deformation across different elastic properties and introduces methods to infer elastic moduli from optical measurements.
Findings
Capsules deform into lens-shaped forms depending on elasticity.
Deformation energy increases adsorption energy, enhancing stability.
Shape equations accurately predict capsule shapes at interfaces.
Abstract
We investigate the deformation of elastic microcapsules adsorbed at liquid-liquid interfaces. An initially spherical elastic capsule at a liquid-liquid interface undergoes circumferential stretching due to the liquid-liquid surface tension and becomes lens- or discus-shaped, depending on its bending rigidity. The resulting elastic capsule deformation is qualitatively similar, but distinct from the deformation of a liquid droplet into a liquid lens at a liquid-liquid interface. We discuss the deformed shapes of droplets and capsules adsorbed at liquid-liquid interfaces for a whole range of different surface elasticities: from droplets (only surface tension) deforming into liquid lenses, droplets with a Hookean membrane (finite stretching modulus, zero bending modulus) deforming into elastic lenses, to microcapsules (finite stretching and bending modulus) deforming into rounded elastic…
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