TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of cooling on droplet size in supersaturation-induced emulsions
AU - Luo, Shirui
AU - Schiffbauer, Jarrod
AU - Luo, Tengfei
N1 - This research was partially supported by the National Science Foundation (award #: 1510826, program officer: Dr William Copper) and the Electric Power Research Institute (managed by Dr Gabriel Ilevbare). We thank Dr Stephan Kress for providing useful help in this study.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - In this work, the droplet size in a water-in-oil emulsion obtained by supersaturation is studied. The emulsion is obtained by cooling down a saturated water/oil solution by a certain temperature difference. The effects of the cooling rate and temperature difference on the produced droplet size are experimentally investigated. The average size of water droplets in the emulsion is found to be proportional to the square root of the cooling rate. By analyzing the time scales of three different steps, including nucleation, droplet growth due to diffusion and coarsening, involved in the emulsification process, it is found that the time scales of nucleation and droplet growth due to mass diffusion are much smaller than the cooling time constant, which is much shorter than the coarsening time scale. A mechanism that links the cooling rate and supersaturation temperature to droplet size is proposed: the cooling rate influences the nucleation and thus droplet density, while the temperature difference, which is linearly proportional to the total volume of precipitated water from the saturated water-in-oil solution, determines the size of each droplet. The droplet size data were found to support this proposed mechanism well. The results obtained from this work may provide useful guidance on controlling the droplet size in the supersaturation-based emulsification process, which has a lot of practical relevance to many applications.
AB - In this work, the droplet size in a water-in-oil emulsion obtained by supersaturation is studied. The emulsion is obtained by cooling down a saturated water/oil solution by a certain temperature difference. The effects of the cooling rate and temperature difference on the produced droplet size are experimentally investigated. The average size of water droplets in the emulsion is found to be proportional to the square root of the cooling rate. By analyzing the time scales of three different steps, including nucleation, droplet growth due to diffusion and coarsening, involved in the emulsification process, it is found that the time scales of nucleation and droplet growth due to mass diffusion are much smaller than the cooling time constant, which is much shorter than the coarsening time scale. A mechanism that links the cooling rate and supersaturation temperature to droplet size is proposed: the cooling rate influences the nucleation and thus droplet density, while the temperature difference, which is linearly proportional to the total volume of precipitated water from the saturated water-in-oil solution, determines the size of each droplet. The droplet size data were found to support this proposed mechanism well. The results obtained from this work may provide useful guidance on controlling the droplet size in the supersaturation-based emulsification process, which has a lot of practical relevance to many applications.
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U2 - 10.1039/c7cp05905a
DO - 10.1039/c7cp05905a
M3 - Article
C2 - 29104997
AN - SCOPUS:85034607668
SN - 1463-9076
VL - 19
SP - 29855
EP - 29861
JO - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
JF - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
IS - 44
ER -