Issue 2, 2016

Comment on “Curvature capillary migration of microspheres” by N. Sharifi-Mood, I. B. Liu, K. J. Stebe, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 6768

Abstract

In a recent paper, Sharifi-Mood et al. studied colloidal particles trapped at a liquid interface with opposite principal curvatures c1 = −c2. In the theory part, they claim that the trapping energy vanishes at second order in Δc = c1c2, which would invalidate our previous result [Phys. Rev. E: Stat., Nonlinear, Soft Matter Phys., 2006, 74, 041402]. Here we show that this claim arises from an improper treatment of the outer boundary condition on the deformation field. For both pinned and moving contact lines, we find that the outer boundary is irrelevant, which confirms our previous work. More generally, we show that the trapping energy is determined by the deformation close to the particle and does not depend on the far-field.

Graphical abstract: Comment on “Curvature capillary migration of microspheres” by N. Sharifi-Mood, I. B. Liu, K. J. Stebe, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 6768

Associated articles

Article information

Article type
Comment
Submitted
05 Aug 2015
Accepted
18 Sep 2015
First published
18 Sep 2015

Soft Matter, 2016,12, 331-332

Comment on “Curvature capillary migration of microspheres” by N. Sharifi-Mood, I. B. Liu, K. J. Stebe, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 6768

A. Würger, Soft Matter, 2016, 12, 331 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM01948F

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