Abstract

Numerous living organisms as well as artificially created self-propelled objects can form dissipative structures due to the nonlinear effects and nonequilibrium of the system. Here we present an active oil-in-water emulsion in which the oil droplets take part in the reciprocating motion under the action of Marangoni flow near the air-water interface. The droplet dynamics in the emulsion is governed by the chemical reaction proceeding between quiescent copper particles and ammonia and by the convective mixing of a surfactant. We established that the reciprocating motion of droplets in the emulsion arises as a result of a periodic change in the Marangoni flow direction at the air-water interface. The feature of the considered system is that the reciprocating motion of droplets is realized only when the surface area fraction of droplets in the emulsion is close to the density of a two-dimensional colloid crystal. Oscillations degenerate under the reduction in surface area fraction to the critical value of ∼50% since the existence of oscillations in the emulsion requires a suppression of the surfactant convective mixing between the inner layers of liquid film and the air-water interface.

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