Inferring the stability of concentrated emulsions from droplet configuration information
Danny Raj Masila, Pavithra Sivakumar, Arshed Nabeel

TL;DR
This study investigates how droplet packing configurations influence avalanche dynamics in concentrated emulsions, revealing that graph properties like mean degree and algebraic connectivity can predict stability and avalanche size.
Contribution
The paper introduces a graph-theoretic approach to relate droplet configuration to avalanche behavior, providing a predictive model based on graph properties.
Findings
Avalanche size depends non-trivially on droplet packing.
Bidisperse emulsions are more stable than monodisperse ones.
Graph properties correlate with avalanche dynamics.
Abstract
When droplets are tightly packed in a 2D microchannel, coalescence of a pair of droplets can trigger an avalanche of coalescence events that propagate through the entire emulsion. This propagation is found to be stochastic, i.e. every coalescence event does not necessarily trigger another. To study how the local probabilistic propagation affects the dynamics of the avalanche, as a whole, a stochastic agent based model is used. Taking as input, i) how the droplets are packed (configuration) and ii) a measure of local probabilistic propagation (experimentally derived; function of fluid and other system parameters), the model predicts the expected size distribution of avalanches. In this article, we investigate how droplet configuration affects the avalanche dynamics. We find the mean size of these avalanches to depend non-trivially on how droplets are packed together. Large variations in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Diffusion and Search Dynamics · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research
