Interfacial rheology of coexisting solid and fluid monolayers

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Biologically relevant monolayer and bilayer films often consist of micron-scale high viscosity domains in a continuous low viscosity matrix. Here we show that this morphology can cause the overall monolayer fluidity to vary by orders of magnitude over a limited range of monolayer compositions. Modeling the system as a two-dimensional suspension in analogy with classic three-dimensional suspensions of hard spheres in a liquid solvent explains the rheological data with no adjustable parameters. In monolayers with ordered, highly viscous domains dispersed in a continuous low viscosity matrix, the surface viscosity increases as a power law with the area fraction of viscous domains. Changing the phase of the continuous matrix from a disordered fluid phase to a more ordered, condensed phase dramatically changes the overall monolayer viscosity. Small changes in the domain density and/or continuous matrix composition can alter the monolayer viscosity by orders of magnitude.
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Issue Date
2017-01
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

AIR-WATER-INTERFACE; LANGMUIR-BLODGETT-FILMS; DOMAIN BOUNDARY FLUCTUATIONS; LUNG SURFACTANT; PHASE-TRANSITIONS; STRESS RHEOMETER; LIPID MONOLAYER; PALMITIC ACID; PHOSPHOLIPID MONOLAYERS; CRITICAL EXPONENTS

Citation

SOFT MATTER, v.13, no.7, pp.1481 - 1492

ISSN
1744-683X
DOI
10.1039/c6sm02797k
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/223365
Appears in Collection
CBE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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