z-logo
Premium
Shape‐Designable Polyhedral Liquid Marbles/Plasticines Stabilized with Polymer Plates
Author(s) -
Fujiwara Junya,
Geyer Florian,
Butt HansJürgen,
Hirai Tomoyasu,
Nakamura Yoshinobu,
Fujii Syuji
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced materials interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.671
H-Index - 65
ISSN - 2196-7350
DOI - 10.1002/admi.202001573
Subject(s) - plasticine , materials science , cuboid , coalescence (physics) , composite material , geometry , petrology , physics , mathematics , astrobiology , geology
Polyhedral liquid marbles/plasticines are prepared using (sub)millimeter‐sized polymer plates as a stabilizer and water as an inner liquid. Precise control of size and shape can be successfully performed by tuning the size ratio of the water droplet and the plate, number of plates adsorbed to the droplet, coalescence (jointing) of multiple polyhedral liquid marbles/plasticines, and application of external mechanical stress. Thanks to interfacial jamming of the plates, plastic deformation of the liquid marbles/plasticines is achieved. The authors are able to fabricate liquid marbles/plasticines with various shapes including A–Z letters of alphabet. Liquid marble/plasticine with an aspect ratio exceeding 800, the largest aspect ratio ever reported, is also successfully prepared; the length of the liquid marble/plasticine exceeded 1.5 m. The liquid marbles can be picked up and be piled up on top of each other using tweezers or fingers. Furthermore, Janus‐type liquid marbles/plasticines with different curvatures and different stabilizers in a single liquid marble/plasticine can be fabricated by coalescence (jointing) of near‐spherical and cuboid liquid marbles/plasticines stabilized by plates with different sizes. An internal liquid flow from the near‐spherical liquid marble to the cuboid liquid marble/plasticine immediately after jointing is observed, making this system act as a micropump.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here