Abstract

AbstractLiquid metals and alloys are attracting renewed attention owing to their potential for application in various advanced technologies. Eutectic gallium‐indium (EGaIn) has been focused on in particular because of its integrated advantages of high conductivity, low melting point, and low toxicity. In this study, the colloidal behavior of nano‐dispersed EGaIn in nonpolar oils is investigated. Although the nonpolar oil continuous phase is commonly considered to be free of electric charges, electrostatic repulsion appears to be crucial in the colloidal stabilization of the nano‐dispersed EGaIn phases, the modulation of which is possible by doping the oil phases with different types of oil‐soluble surfactants. The qualitative correlation between the observed colloidal stabilities and the “zero field” particle mobilities inferred from the field‐dependent electrophoretic mobilities indicates that the electric charging of EGaIn particles in surfactant‐doped nonpolar oils is a static phenomenon that is maintained in equilibrium, rather than a solely field‐induced process. A systematic investigation of the charging properties of these unique biphasic particles, consisting of the liquid Ga‐In bulk and the solid Ga2O3 surface that formed spontaneously, reveals the complicated system‐dependent nature of the charging mechanisms mediated by ionic and nonionic surfactants in nonpolar media.

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