The dynamics of thin films containing polymer solutions are studied with a pressure-controlled thin film balance. The technique allows the control of the magnitude, the sign and the duration of...
Foams can resist destabilizaton in ways that appear similar
on
a macroscopic scale, but the microscopic origins of the stability
and the loss thereof can be quite diverse. Here, we compare both the
macroscopic drainage and ultimate collapse of aqueous foams stabilized
by either a partially hydrolyzed poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) or a nonionic
low-molecular-weight surfactant (BrijO10) with the dynamics of individual
thin films at the microscale. From this comparison, we gain significant
insight regarding the effect of both surface stresses and intermolecular
forces on macroscopic foam stability. Distinct regimes in the lifetime
of the foams were observed. Drainage at early stages is controlled
by the different stress-boundary conditions at the surfaces of the
bubbles between the polymer and the surfactant. The stress-carrying
capacity of PVA-stabilized interfaces is a result of the mutual contribution
of Marangoni stresses and surface shear viscosity. In contrast, surface
shear inviscidity and much weaker Marangoni stresses were observed
for the nonionic surfactant surfaces, resulting in faster drainage
times, both at the level of the single film and the macroscopic foam.
At longer times, the PVA foams present a regime of homogeneous coalescence
where isolated coalescence events are observed. This regime, which
is observed only for PVA foams, occurs when the capillary pressure
reaches the maximum disjoining pressure. A final regime is then observed
for both systems where a fast coalescence front propagates from the
top to the bottom of the foams. The critical liquid fractions and
capillary pressures at which this regime is obtained are similar for
both PVA and BrijO10 foams, which most likely indicates that collapse
is related to a universal mechanism that seems unrelated to the stabilizer
interfacial dynamics.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.