posted on 2017-07-28, 00:00authored byYiran Zhang, Vivek Sharma
Controlling and predicting
the stability and lifetime of freestanding
films, including foam and emulsion films, is crucial for many industrial
and biological applications. Freestanding films (thickness <100
nm), stabilized by surfactants above the critical micelle concentration,
exhibit stratification or stepwise thinning. Stratification proceeds
by formation of thinner domains that grow at the expense of surrounding
films. In this Article, we address several longstanding challenges
related to the experimental characterization and theoretical description
of thickness variations, forces, fluxes and flows underlying stratification.
We show that nanoridges form and grow at the moving front around expanding
domains, and we visualize their shape evolution using Interferometry
Digital Imaging Optical Microscopy (IDIOM) protocols with an unprecedented
spatiotemporal resolution (thickness <10 nm, time <1 ms). We
develop a theoretical model for drainage via stratification under
the influence of supramolecular oscillatory surface forces arising
from the confinement-induced layering of micelles, and we show that
the nanoridge growth and domain expansion dynamics can be modeled
quantitatively.