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Complex emulsions are dispersions of kinetically stabilized multiphasic emulsion droplets comprised of two or more immiscible liquids that provide a novel material platform for the generation of active and dynamic soft materials. In recent years, the intrinsic reconfigurable morphological behavior of complex emulsions, which can be attributed to the unique force equilibrium between the interfacial tensions acting at the various interfaces, has become of fundamental and applied interest. As such, particularly biphasic Janus droplets have been investigated as structural templates for the generation of anisotropic precision objects, dynamic optical elements or as transducers and signal amplifiers in chemo- and bio-sensing applications. In the present thesis, switchable internal morphological responses of complex droplets triggered by stimuli-induced alterations of the balance of interfacial tensions have been explored as a universal building block for the design of multiresponsive, active, and adaptive liquid colloidal systems. A series of underlying principles and mechanisms that influence the equilibrium of interfacial tensions have been uncovered, which allowed the targeted design of emulsion bodies that can alter their shape, bind and roll on surfaces, or change their geometrical shape in response to chemical stimuli. Consequently, combinations of the unique triggerable behavior of Janus droplets with designer surfactants, such as a stimuli-responsive photosurfactant (AzoTAB) resulted for instance in shape-changing soft colloids that exhibited a jellyfish inspired buoyant motion behavior, holding great promise for the design of biological inspired active material architectures and transformable soft robotics.
In situ observations of spherical Janus emulsion droplets using a customized side-view microscopic imaging setup with accompanying pendant dropt measurements disclosed the sensitivity regime of the unique chemical-morphological coupling inside complex emulsions and enabled the recording of calibration curves for the extraction of critical parameters of surfactant effectiveness. The deduced new "responsive drop" method permitted a convenient and cost-efficient quantification and comparison of the critical micelle concentrations (CMCs) and effectiveness of various cationic, anionic, and nonionic surfactants. Moreover, the method allowed insightful characterization of stimuli-responsive surfactants and monitoring of the impact of inorganic salts on the CMC and surfactant effectiveness of ionic and nonionic surfactants. Droplet functionalization with synthetic crown ether surfactants yielded a synthetically minimal material platform capable of autonomous and reversible adaptation to its chemical environment through different supramolecular host-guest recognition events. Addition of metal or ammonium salts resulted in the uptake of the resulting hydrophobic complexes to the hydrocarbon hemisphere, whereas addition of hydrophilic ammonium compounds such as amino acids or polypeptides resulted in supramolecular assemblies at the hydrocarbon-water interface of the droplets. The multiresponsive material platform enabled interfacial complexation and
thus triggered responses of the droplets to a variety of chemical triggers including metal ions, ammonium compounds, amino acids, antibodies, carbohydrates as well as amino-functionalized solid surfaces.
In the final chapter, the first documented optical logic gates and combinatorial logic circuits based on complex emulsions are presented. More specifically, the unique reconfigurable and multiresponsive properties of complex emulsions were exploited to realize droplet-based logic gates of varying complexity using different stimuli-responsive surfactants in combination with diverse readout methods. In summary, different designs for multiresponsive, active, and adaptive liquid colloidal systems were presented and investigated, enabling the design of novel transformative chemo-intelligent soft material platforms.
Completely water-based systems are of interest for the development of novel material for various reasons: On one hand, they provide benign environment for biological systems and on the other hand they facilitate effective molecular transport in a membrane-free environment. In order to investigate the general potential of aqueous two-phase systems (ATPSs) for biomaterials and compartmentalized systems, various solid particles were applied to stabilize all-aqueous emulsion droplets. The target ATPS to be investigated should be prepared via mixing of two aqueous solutions of water-soluble polymers, which turn biphasic when exceeding a critical polymer concentration. Hydrophilic polymers with a wide range of molar mass such as dextran/poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) can therefore be applied. Solid particles adsorbed at the interfaces can be exceptionally efficient stabilizers forming so-called Pickering emulsions, and nanoparticles can bridge the correlation length of polymer solutions and are thereby the best option for water-in-water emulsions.
The first approach towards the investigation of ATPS was conducted with all aqueous dextran-PEG emulsions in the presence of poly(dopamine) particles (PDP) in Chapter 4. The water-in-water emulsions were formed with a PEG/dextran system via utilizing PDP as stabilizers. Studies of the formed emulsions were performed via laser scanning confocal microscope (CLSM), optical microscope (OM), cryo-scanning electron microscope (SEM) and tensiometry. The stable emulsions (at least 16 weeks) were demulsified easily via dilution or surfactant addition. Furthermore, the solid PDP at the water-water interface were crosslinked in order to inhibit demulsification of the Pickering emulsion. Transmission electron microscope (TEM) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) were used to visualize the morphology of PDP before and after crosslinking. PDP stabilized water-in-water emulsions were utilized in the following Chapter 5 to form supramolecular compartmentalized hydrogels. Here, hydrogels were prepared in pre-formed water-in-water emulsions and gelled via α-cyclodextrin-PEG (α-CD-PEG) inclusion complex formation. Studies of the formed complexes were performed via X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and the mechanical properties of the hydrogels were measured with oscillatory shear rheology. In order to verify the compartmentalized state and its triggered decomposition, hydrogels and emulsions were assessed via OM, SEM and CLSM. The last chapter broadens the investigations from the previous two systems by utilizing various carbon nitrides (CN) as different stabilizers in ATPS. CN introduces another way to trigger demulsification, namely irradiation with visible light. Therefore, emulsification and demulsification with various triggers were probed. The investigated all aqueous multi-phase systems will act as model for future fabrication of biocompatible materials, cell micropatterning as well as separation of compartmentalized systems.