Direct measurement of surface interactions experienced by sticky microcapsules made from environmentally benign materials
Hairou Yu, Christopher L. Wirth

TL;DR
This study combines experiments, theory, and simulations to measure and analyze the surface interactions of environmentally friendly microcapsules with solid boundaries, revealing a mild sticky potential due to tethering forces.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the short-range potential energy well and tethered interactions of microcapsules using combined experimental and computational methods.
Findings
Microcapsules exhibit a potential well with two minima.
Normalized diffusivity of microcapsules is much lower than solid particles.
Critical tethering height and alginate radius were quantified.
Abstract
We present a study combining experimental measurements, theoretical analysis, and simulations to investigate core-shell microcapsules interacting with a solid boundary, with a particular focus on understanding the short-range potential energy well arising from the tethered force. The microcapsules, fabricated using a Pickering emulsion template with a cinnamon oil core and calcium alginate shell, were characterized for size (5-6 microns in diameter) and surface charge (-20 mV). We employed total internal reflection microscopy and particle tracking to measure the microcapsule-boundary interactions and diffusion, from which potential energy and diffusivity profiles were derived. The potential energy profile was analyzed and simulated by considering electrostatic, gravitational, and tethered forces, while the diffusivity was compared to that of a solid particle-boundary interaction,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface Modification and Superhydrophobicity · Adhesion, Friction, and Surface Interactions
