Abstract

The electrohydrodynamic deformation of an emulsion droplet with a clean and particle-covered interface was explored. Here, the electrohydrodynamic deformation was numerically and experimentally demonstrated under the stimuli of moderate and strong electric fields. The numerical method involves the coupling of the Navier–Stokes equation with the level set equation of interface tracking and the governing equations of so-called leaky dielectric theory. The simulation model developed for a clean interface droplet was then extended to a capsule model for densely particle-covered droplets. The experiments were conducted using various combinations of immiscible oils and particle suspensions while the electric field strength ~105 V/m was generated using a high voltage supply. The experimental images obtained by the camera were post-processed using an in-house image processing code developed on the plat-form of MATLAB software. The results show that particle-free droplets can undergo prolate (deformation in the applied electric field direction) or oblate deformation (deformation that is perpendicular to the direction of the applied electric field) of the droplet interface, whereas the low-conductivity particles can be manipulated at the emulsion interface to form a ‘belt’, ‘helmet’ or ‘cup’ morphologies. A densely particle-covered droplet may not restore to its initial spherical shape due to ‘particle jamming’ at the interface, resulting in the formation of unique droplet shapes. Densely particle-covered droplets behave like droplets covered with a thin particle sheet, a capsule. The deformation of such droplets is explored using a simulation model under a range of electric capillary numbers (i.e., the ratio of the electric stresses to the capillary stresses acting at the droplet interface). The results obtained are then compared with the theory and experimental findings. It was shown that the proposed simulation model can serve as a tool to predict the deformation/distortion of both the particle-free and the densely particle-covered droplets within the small deformation limit. We believe that this study could provide new findings for the fabrication of complex-shaped species and colloidosomes.

Highlights

  • A mixture of two or more immiscible liquids results in the formation of emulsions [1,2]

  • The dynamics of a nearly neutrally buoyant droplet suspended in immiscible liquid subjected to an electric field is studied

  • A simulation model was established for understanding the deformation dynamics of the particle-free droplet, which was extended to predict the deformation of a particle-covered droplet

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Summary

Introduction

A mixture of two or more immiscible liquids results in the formation of emulsions [1,2]. Materials 2020, 13, 2984 dynamic mechanisms and instabilities [3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15] It has wide applications including targeted drug delivery [16,17], particle synthesis [18], material science [19,20], electrohydrodynamic atomization [21], particle manipulation [22,23] and producing unique colloidal assemblies [24,25,26]. Different authors reported that the deformation/distortion estimated by the numerical simulation showed good matching with the experimental results even at the larger deformation of the droplet [4,5,27]

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