anthony (tony) dinsmore associate professor of physics university of massachusetts amherst

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Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst Hasbrouck 411 666 North Pleasant St. Amherst, MA 01003 413-545-3786 E-mail: [email protected] STEM Science and Engineering Saturday Seminar: Colloids and Emulsions. The research shown here was supported by the National Science Foundation through grants DMR- 0907195 and CBET-0967620. Feb 12., 2011. UMass Amhers

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STEM Science and Engineering Saturday Seminar : Colloids and Emulsions. Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst Hasbrouck 411 666 North Pleasant St. Amherst, MA 01003 413-545-3786 E-mail: [email protected]. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Anthony (Tony) DinsmoreAssociate Professor of PhysicsUniversity of Massachusetts AmherstHasbrouck 411666 North Pleasant St.Amherst, MA 01003413-545-3786E-mail: [email protected]

STEM Science and Engineering Saturday Seminar: Colloids and Emulsions.

The research shown here was supported by the National Science Foundation through grants DMR-0907195 and CBET-0967620.

Feb 12., 2011. UMass Amherst

Page 2: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Eucerin skin cream in an optical microscope

Size scale: approximately 0.4 mm (400 microns) across the image. The diameter of the big blob near the center (probably a liquid droplet) is similar in size to the diameter of a hair.

Page 3: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Suave hand lotion in an optical microscope

Page 4: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Wet Latex paint in an optical microscopeThe paint color is “Sag Harbor Gray,” but the image is grayscale.

Page 5: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst
Page 6: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Figure 2 | Meniscus climbing by the larva of the waterlily leaf beetle.

Figure 1 | Meniscus climbing by the water treader Mesovelia.

(Movies are included with the article!)

Page 7: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst
Page 8: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst
Page 9: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

4 80

4

8

Ln(x)

x

Shape can be described mathematically as a logarithmheight Ln(x)

Page 10: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst
Page 11: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Half-and-half seen in an optical microscope(Homogenized and Pasteurized)

Brownian motion/diffusion is visible here and can also be seen by light scattering.

Page 12: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

(Charlie Chaplin demonstrates Brownian motion – something like the chaotic dance of molecules)

Page 13: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst
Page 14: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Naturally occurring:

Jiang et al, Chem. Mater. 11, 2132 (1999).

http://www.theimage.com/gemstone/opal/opal.html

Colloidal CrystalsColloidal Crystals

Murray & Sanders, Philos. Mag. A 42, 721 (1980).

Made in a laboratory:

Page 15: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Watching crystals form

The spheres attract one another when they come close. Water, salt, and surfactant (soap) are present too, but not seen in the images.

These crystals are composed of spheres that are vastly bigger than individual molecules, but the process by which they crystallize is very similar. (And it can be seen in a microscope!)

A crystal of atoms would move MUCH faster and this process would be completed in approximately 0.00000000001 seconds! (That’s 10 picoseconds.)

(John Savage and A. D.)

Page 16: Anthony (Tony) Dinsmore Associate Professor of Physics University of Massachusetts Amherst

Experiments with the Bubble Model of a Metal Structure Sir Lawrence Bragg, W. M. Lomer, and J. F. Nye (1954)