Yaowen Xing
Max Planck Society
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Yaowen Xing.
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2017
Yaowen Xing; Xiahui Gui; Lei Pan; Bat-El Pinchasik; Yijun Cao; Jiongtian Liu; Michael Kappl; Hans-Jürgen Butt
Bubble-particle interaction is of great theoretical and practical importance in flotation. Significant progress has been achieved over the past years and the process of bubble-particle collision is reasonably well understood. This, however, is not the case for bubble-particle attachment leading to three-phase contact line formation due to the difficulty in both theoretical analysis and experimental verification. For attachment, surface forces play a major role. They control the thinning and rupture of the liquid film between the bubble and the particle. The coupling between force, bubble deformation and film drainage is critical to understand the underlying mechanism responsible for bubble-particle attachment. In this review we first discuss the advances in macroscopic experimental methods for characterizing bubble-particle attachment such as induction timer and high speed visualization. Then we focus on advances in measuring the force and drainage of thin liquid films between an air bubble and a solid surface at a nanometer scale. Advances, limits, challenges, and future research opportunities are discussed. By combining atomic force microscopy and reflection interference contrast microscopy, the force, bubble deformation, and liquid film drainage can be measured simultaneously. The simultaneous measurement of the interaction force and the spatiotemporal evolution of the confined liquid film hold great promise to shed new light on flotation.
Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2018
Yaowen Xing; Mengdi Xu; Xiahui Gui; Yijun Cao; Bent Babel; Martin Rudolph; Stefan Weber; Michael Kappl; Hans-Jürgen Butt
During the past years, atomic force microscopy (AFM) has matured to an indispensable tool to characterize nanomaterials in colloid and interface science. For imaging, a sharp probe mounted near to the end of a cantilever scans over the sample surface providing a high resolution three-dimensional topographic image. In addition, the AFM tip can be used as a force sensor to detect local properties like adhesion, stiffness, charge etc. After the invention of the colloidal probe technique it has also become a major method to measure surface forces. In this review, we highlight the advances in the application of AFM in the field of mineral flotation, such as mineral morphology imaging, water at mineral surface, reagent adsorption, inter-particle force, and bubble-particle interaction. In the coming years, the complementary characterization of chemical composition such as using infrared spectroscopy and Raman spectroscopy for AFM topography imaging and the synchronous measurement of the force and distance involving deformable bubble as a force sensor will further assist the fundamental understanding of flotation mechanism.
Materials horizons | 2018
Minghan Hu; Stefan Peil; Yaowen Xing; Diana Döhler; Lucas Caire da Silva; Wolfgang H. Binder; Michael Kappl; Markus B. Bannwarth
Autonomous highlighting of damage in protective polymer coatings allows on-demand maintenance and enables prolongation of the lifetimes of the coated materials. To monitor the entire cycle of damage occurrence and successful healing, one must be able to visualize both processes and display the current health-state of the coating. Herein, we equipped coatings with nanocapsules that can self-indicate their mechanical micro-damage via color development. Hence, whenever the coating was damaged, the capsules broke and highlighted the damaged spot. As a second feature, the color development was reversed and discoloration occurred in the presence of (self-)healing compounds, allowing the user to monitor the healing process. Thus, in the first step, damages were highlighted via color “turn-on” and in the subsequent step a propagating healing reaction “turns-off” the damage indication system to trace the healing reaction and allow monitoring of the entire health cycle.
Energy & Fuels | 2016
Yaowen Xing; Xiahui Gui; Yijun Cao
Energy & Fuels | 2017
Yaowen Xing; Chenwei Li; Xiahui Gui; Yijun Cao
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017
Yaowen Xing; Xiahui Gui; Yijun Cao
Energy & Fuels | 2017
Mengdi Xu; Yaowen Xing; Xiahui Gui; Yijun Cao; Dongyue Wang; Longwu Wang
Minerals | 2018
Mengdi Xu; Yaowen Xing; Yijun Cao; Xiahui Gui
Powder Technology | 2017
Yaowen Xing; Xiahui Gui; Yijun Cao
Minerals | 2017
Yaowen Xing; Xiahui Gui; Fırat Karakas; Yijun Cao