Results 151 to 160 of about 50,234 (181)
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Liquid Marble-Induced Dewetting
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2020We explored the wetting regimes inherent to liquid marbles filled with aqueous alcohol placed on water layers of various thickness.
Pritam Kumar Roy +5 more
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Electrowetting of Nonwetting Liquids and Liquid Marbles
Langmuir, 2006Transport of a water droplet on a solid surface can be achieved by differentially modifying the contact angles at either side of the droplet using capacitive charging of the solid-liquid interface (i.e., electrowetting-on-dielectric) to create a driving force.
G, McHale +4 more
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Osmotic evolution of composite liquid marbles
Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 2021We hypothesized that the reported evolution (growth) of composite water marbles filled with saline water and coated with lycopodium dispersed in a thin layer of silicone oil is due to the osmotic mass transfer. The hypothesis is supported by the semi-empirical model of osmotic growth of small liquid marbles floating on distilled water.Saline composite,
Pritam, Kumar Roy +4 more
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Photoresponsive Liquid Marbles and Dry Water
Langmuir, 2014Stimuli-responsive liquid marbles for controlled release typically rely on organic moieties that require lengthy syntheses. We report herein a facile, one-step synthesis of hydrophobic and oleophobic TiO2 nanoparticles that display photoresponsive wettability.
Chew, Benny Kia Jia +8 more
openaire +4 more sources
2012
Granulation, the process of formation of granules from a combination of base powders and binder liquids, has been a subject of research for almost 50 years, studied extensively for its vast applications, primarily to the pharmaceutical industry sector.
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Granulation, the process of formation of granules from a combination of base powders and binder liquids, has been a subject of research for almost 50 years, studied extensively for its vast applications, primarily to the pharmaceutical industry sector.
openaire +2 more sources
Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 2006
Liquid marbles are liquid drops made non-wetting by the use of a powder which coats them. Because of the absence of a contact line, quick motions without leakage of small amounts of liquid are allowed, which can be of interest in microfluidic applications.
Aussillous, Pascale, Quéré, David
openaire +1 more source
Liquid marbles are liquid drops made non-wetting by the use of a powder which coats them. Because of the absence of a contact line, quick motions without leakage of small amounts of liquid are allowed, which can be of interest in microfluidic applications.
Aussillous, Pascale, Quéré, David
openaire +1 more source
Liquid marbles and liquid plasticines with nanoparticle monolayers
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science, 2019Liquid marbles, as particle-covered macroscopic liquid drops in an air environment, have exhibited great value as self-standing liquid containers in various areas, such as material synthesis, chemical analysis, and cell culture. However, conventional liquid marbles obtained by the rolling-on-powder-bed method usually feature micron-sized or larger ...
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Preprogramming Floating Time of Liquid Marble
Advanced Functional Materials, 2023Mizuki Tenjimbayashi, Uttam Manna
exaly

