ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
Colloidosomes provide a possibility to encapsulate oily substances in water in the form of core-in-shell structures. In this study, we produced microcapsules with shell from colloidal particles, where the interparticle openings are blocked by mixed layers from polymer and surfactant that prevent the leakage of cargo molecules. The particles and polymer play the role of bricks and mortar. We used hydrophilic silica particles, which were partially hydrophobized by the adsorption of potassium oleate to enable them to stabilize Pickering emulsions. Various polymers were tested to select the most appropriate one. The procedure of encapsulation is simple and includes single homogenization by ultrasound. The produced capsules are pH responsive. They are stable in aqueous phase of pH in the range 3-6, but at pH>6 they are destabilized and their cargo is released. With the optimized formulation of silica particles, polymer, oleate and NaCl, we were able to encapsulate various oils and fragrances, such as tetradecane, limonene, benzyl salicylate and citronellol. All of them have a limited and not too high solubility in water. In contrast, no stable microcapsules were obtained with oils that either have zero water solubility (mineral and silicone oil) or higher water solubility (phenoxyethanol and benzyl alcohol). By analysis of results from additional interfacial-tension and thin-film experiments, we concluded that a key factor for obtaining stable capsules is the irreversible adsorption of the polymer at the oil/water interface. The hydrophobization of the particles by surfactant adsorption (instead of silanization) plays an important role for the pH responsiveness of the produced capsules.
The mechanism behind the $^1$H NMR frequency dependence of $T_1$ and the viscosity dependence of $T_2$ for polydisperse polymers and bitumen remains elusive. We elucidate the matter through NMR relaxation measurements of polydisperse polymers over an
Motivated by an experiment in which the singlet-triplet gap in triphenylene based copolymers was effectively tuned, we used time dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) to reproduce the main results. By means of conventional and long-range correc
We have used neutron scattering to investigate the influence of concentration on the conformation of a star polymer. By varying the contrast between the solvent and isotopically labeled stars, we obtain the distributions of polymer and solvent within
The kinetics of the self-assembly of nanocomponents into a virus, nanocapsule, or other composite structure is analyzed via a multiscale approach. The objective is to achieve predictability and to preserve key atomic-scale features that underlie the
Explicit molecular dynamics simulations were applied to a pair of amorphous silica nanoparticles in aqueous solution, of diameter 4.4 nm with four different background electrolyte concentrations, to extract the mean force acting between the pair of s