Issue 26, 2014

Commensurability-driven structural defects in double emulsions produced with two-step microfluidic techniques

Abstract

The combination of two drop makers such as flow focusing geometries or ┬ junctions is commonly used in microfluidics to fabricate monodisperse double emulsions and novel fluid-based materials. Here we investigate the physics of the encapsulation of small droplets inside large drops that is at the core of such processes. The number of droplets per drop studied over time for large sequences of consecutive drops reveals that the dynamics of these systems are complex: we find a succession of well-defined elementary patterns and defects. We present a simple model based on a discrete approach that predicts the nature of these patterns and their non-trivial scheme of arrangement in a sequence as a function of the ratio of the two timescales of the problem, the production times of droplets and drops. Experiments validate our model as they concur very well with predictions.

Graphical abstract: Commensurability-driven structural defects in double emulsions produced with two-step microfluidic techniques

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 Mar 2014
Accepted
08 May 2014
First published
08 May 2014

Soft Matter, 2014,10, 4743-4748

Author version available

Commensurability-driven structural defects in double emulsions produced with two-step microfluidic techniques

A. Schmit, L. Salkin, L. Courbin and P. Panizza, Soft Matter, 2014, 10, 4743 DOI: 10.1039/C4SM00639A

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