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Dive into the research topics where Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez is active.

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Featured researches published by Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez.


Langmuir | 2014

Comparison of the Interfacial Activity between Homogeneous and Janus Gold Nanoparticles by Pendant Drop Tensiometry

Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Yang Song; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Valverde; Shaowei Chen; Miguel A. Cabrerizo-Vílchez; R. Hidalgo-Álvarez

The interfacial activity of 3.5 nm homogeneous (HPs) and amphiphilic Janus gold nanoparticles (JPs) was characterized by pendant drop tensiometry for water/air and water/decane interfaces. This technique requires a smaller quantity of nanoparticles than the traditional Langmuir balance technique. The direct deposition at the interface of the nanoparticles dispersed in a spreading solvent also requires smaller quantities of sample than does adsorption from the bulk. From the growing and shrinking of the pendant drops, the interfacial activity of the nanoparticles can be evaluated and compared within a wide range of area per particle. In this work, the JPs exhibited a higher interfacial activity than did the HPs in all cases. A hard disk model fits the piecewise compression isotherm of the HPs, yet this model underestimates the interactions between the JPs adsorbed at the interface.


Soft Matter | 2016

Isostructural solid–solid phase transition in monolayers of soft core–shell particles at fluid interfaces: structure and mechanics

Marcel Rey; Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Mathias Steinacher; Laura Scheidegger; Karen Geisel; Walter Richtering; Todd M. Squires; Lucio Isa

We have studied the complete two-dimensional phase diagram of a core-shell microgel-laden fluid interface by synchronizing its compression with the deposition of the interfacial monolayer. Applying a new protocol, different positions on the substrate correspond to different values of the monolayer surface pressure and specific area. Analyzing the microstructure of the deposited monolayers, we discovered an isostructural solid-solid phase transition between two crystalline phases with the same hexagonal symmetry, but with two different lattice constants. The two phases corresponded to shell-shell and core-core inter-particle contacts, respectively; with increasing surface pressure the former mechanically failed enabling the particle cores to come into contact. In the phase-transition region, clusters of particles in core-core contacts nucleate, melting the surrounding shell-shell crystal, until the whole monolayer moves into the second phase. We furthermore measured the interfacial rheology of the monolayers as a function of the surface pressure using an interfacial microdisk rheometer. The interfaces always showed a strong elastic response, with a dip in the shear elastic modulus in correspondence with the melting of the shell-shell phase, followed by a steep increase upon the formation of a percolating network of the core-core contacts. These results demonstrate that the core-shell nature of the particles leads to a rich mechanical and structural behavior that can be externally tuned by compressing the interface, indicating new routes for applications, e.g. in surface patterning or emulsion stabilization.


Langmuir | 2015

Interfacial Activity and Contact Angle of Homogeneous, Functionalized, and Janus Nanoparticles at the Water/Decane Interface

Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Jose Ramos; Lucio Isa; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Valverde; Miguel A. Cabrerizo-Vílchez; R. Hidalgo-Álvarez

Surface heterogeneity affects the behavior of nanoparticles at liquid interfaces. To gain a deeper understanding on the details of these phenomena, we have measured the interfacial activity and contact angle at water/decane interfaces for three different types of nanoparticles: homogeneous poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), silica functionalized with a capping ligand containing a methacrylate terminal group, and Ag-based Janus colloids with two capping ligands of different hydrophobicity. The interfacial activity was analyzed by pendant drop tensiometry, and the contact angle was measured directly by freeze-fracture shadow-casting cryo-scanning electron microscopy. The silver Janus nanoparticles presented the highest interfacial activity, compared to the silica nanoparticles and the homogeneous PMMA nanoparticles. Additionally, increasing the bulk concentration of the PMMA and silica nanoparticles up to 100-fold compared to the Janus nanoparticles led to silica particles forming fractal-like structures at the interface, contrary to the PMMA particles that did not show any spontaneous adsorption.


Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2016

Surface activity of Janus particles adsorbed at fluid-fluid interfaces: Theoretical and experimental aspects.

Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Valverde; Miguel A. Cabrerizo-Vílchez; R. Hidalgo-Álvarez

Since de Gennes coined in 1992 the term Janus particle (JP), there has been a continued effort to develop this field. The purpose of this review is to present the most relevant theoretical and experimental results obtained so far on the surface activity of amphiphilic JPs at fluid interfaces. The surface activity of JPs at fluid-fluid interfaces can be experimentally determined using two different methods: the classical Langmuir balance or the pendant drop tensiometry. The second method requires much less amount of sample than the first one, but it has also some experimental limitations. In all cases collected here the JPs exhibited a higher surface or interfacial activity than the corresponding homogeneous particles. This reveals the significant advantage of JPs for the stabilization of emulsions and foams.


Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2017

Particles adsorbed at various non-aqueous liquid-liquid interfaces

Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Bernard P. Binks; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Valverde; Miguel A. Cabrerizo-Vílchez; R. Hidalgo-Álvarez

Particles adsorbed at liquid interfaces are commonly used to stabilise water-oil Pickering emulsions and water-air foams. The fundamental understanding of the physics of particles adsorbed at water-air and water-oil interfaces is improving significantly due to novel techniques that enable the measurement of the contact angle of individual particles at a given interface. The case of non-aqueous interfaces and emulsions is less studied in the literature. Non-aqueous liquid-liquid interfaces in which water is replaced by other polar solvents have properties similar to those of water-oil interfaces. Nanocomposites of non-aqueous immiscible polymer blends containing inorganic particles at the interface are of great interest industrially and consequently more work has been devoted to them. By contrast, the behaviour of particles adsorbed at oil-oil interfaces in which both oils are immiscible and of low dielectric constant (ε<3) is scarcely studied. Hydrophobic particles are required to stabilise these oil-oil emulsions due to their irreversible adsorption, high interfacial activity and elastic shell behaviour.


EPL | 2017

Two-dimensional assemblies of soft repulsive colloids confined at fluid interfaces*

Lucio Isa; Ivo Buttinoni; Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Siddarth Ayakulangara Vasudevan

Colloidal systems are an excellent example of a materials class for which interrogating fundamental questions leads to answers of direct applied relevance. In our group, we in particular focus on two-dimensional assemblies of micro- and nano-particles confined at the interface between two fluids, e.g. , oil-water. Here, we review our work on systems interacting through soft repulsive forces of different origin, i.e. , electrostatic and steric. By starting from the paradigmatic case of charged colloids at an interface, we show how they are both offering great opportunities as model systems to investigate the structural and mechanical response of materials and as versatile patterning tools for surface nanostructuring. We then move to the case of deformable particles interacting via steric contacts. We first examine microgel particles, which we also demonstrate as very promising models for structural investigations and robust elements for tunable nanolithography. We conclude by briefly discussing the case of particles comprising a hard inorganic core and a deformable polymer shell, which maintain some of the advantageous features of microgel particles, but also enable the realization of two-dimensional functional materials. This article offers our perspective on a very active field of research, where many interesting developments are expected in the near future.


Archive | 2013

Janus Particles and Interfacial Activity

Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Valverde; Miguel A. Cabrerizo-Vílchez; R. Hidalgo-Álvarez

Janus particles are colloids with two different spatial domains. When these domains are synthesized with a contrast in wettability the particle shows an enhanced interfacial activity in comparison with the corresponding homogeneous particles. There are different synthesis routes to fabricate such particles. One of the most common is to start with a homogeneous particle and functionalize just one hemisphere of the particle or form the particle directly with two compartments, the so-called true Janus particles. Other particles which rely on the phase separation during synthesis are rather considered Janus-like particles. The Langmuir balance and the pendant drop tensiometry are useful to characterize the interfacial activity of the Janus and homogeneous particles at liquid interfaces.


Nano Letters | 2016

Fully Tunable Silicon Nanowire Arrays Fabricated by Soft Nanoparticle Templating.

Marcel Rey; Roey Elnathan; Ran Ditcovski; Karen Geisel; Michele Zanini; Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Vikrant V. Naik; Andreas Frutiger; Walter Richtering; Tal Ellenbogen; Nicolas H. Voelcker; Lucio Isa


Soft Matter | 2014

Surface activity and collective behaviour of colloidally stable Janus-like particles at the air–water interface

Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Miguel A. Rodríguez-Valverde; Miguel A. Cabrerizo-Vílchez; R. Hidalgo-Álvarez


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017

Compression and deposition of microgel monolayers from fluid interfaces: particle size effects on interface microstructure and nanolithography

Laura Scheidegger; Miguel Angel Fernandez-Rodriguez; Karen Geisel; Michele Zanini; Roey Elnathan; Walter Richtering; Lucio Isa

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Shaowei Chen

University of California

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