Fan Jin

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Name: 金帆; Jin, Fan
Organization: The University of Science and Technology of China , China
Department:
Title: Professor(PhD)

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Co-reporter:Peng Gao, Zonglin Yi, Xiaochen Xing, To Ngai, and Fan Jin
Langmuir 2016 Volume 32(Issue 19) pp:4909-4916
Publication Date(Web):April 25, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.langmuir.6b01362
The assembly and manipulation of charged colloidal particles at oil/water interfaces represent active areas of fundamental and applied research. Previously, we have shown that colloidal particles can spontaneously generate unstable residual charges at the particle/oil interface when spreading solvent is used to disperse them at an oil/water interface. These residual charges in turn affect the long-ranged electrostatic repulsive forces and packing of particles at the interface. To further uncover the influence arising from the spreading solvents on interfacial particle interactions, in the present study we utilize pure buoyancy to drive the particles onto an oil/water interface and compare the differences between such a spontaneously adsorbed particle monolayer to the spread monolayer based on solvent spreading techniques. Our results show that the solvent-free method could also lead particles to spread well at the interface, but it does not result in violent sliding of particles along the interface. More importantly, this additive-free spreading method can avoid the formation of unstable residual charges at the particle/oil interface. These findings agree well with our previous hypothesis; namely, those unstable residual charges are triboelectric charges that arise from the violently rubbing of particles on oil at the interface. Therefore, if the spreading solvents could be avoided, then we would be able to get rid of the formation of residual charges at interfaces. This finding will provide insight for precisely controlling the interactions among colloidal particles trapped at fluid/fluid interfaces.
Co-reporter:Tao Liu;Jinming Hu;Zhenyu Jin;Shiyong Liu
Advanced Healthcare Materials 2013 Volume 2( Issue 12) pp:1576-1581
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adhm.201200436
Co-reporter:Jinming Hu;Tao Liu;Guoying Zhang;Shiyong Liu
Macromolecular Rapid Communications 2013 Volume 34( Issue 9) pp:749-758
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/marc.201200613
Benzene, 1,4-bis(bromomethyl)-2,5-dimethoxy-
Phenol, 4,4'-(1-methylethylidene)bis-, polymer with 2-(chloromethyl)oxirane and 4,4'-methylenebis[benzenamine]
METHYL 4-(AMINOMETHYL)-3-CHLOROBENZOATE
Poly[oxy(1,4-dioxo-1,4-butanediyl)oxy-1,4-butanediyl]
Poly[oxy-1,4-phenylene(1-methylethylidene)-1,4-phenyleneoxycarbonyli mino-1,6-hexanediyliminocarbonyl]
1,4-Butanediol-succinic acid copolymer
Thulium(III) chloride
Amino resin
2,5-DIMETHOXYBENZENE-1,4-DICARBOXALDEHYDE;2,5-DIMETHOXYTEREPHTHALALDEHYDE
1-(DIETHOXYPHOSPHORYLMETHYL)-4-ETHENYLBENZENE