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Miniemulsion



A miniemulsion is a special case of emulsion. A miniemulsion is obtained by shearing a mixture comprising two immscible liquid phases, one surfactant and one co-surfactant (typical examples are hexadecane or cetyl alcohol).

The shearing proceeds usually via ultrasonication of the mixture or with a high-pressure homogenizer, which are high-shearing processes. In an ideal miniemulsion system, coalescence and Ostwald ripening are suppressed thanks to the presence of the surfactant and co-surfactant, respectively.

Stable droplets are then obtained, which have typically a size between 50 and 500 nm. The miniemulsion process is therefore particularly adapted for the generation of nanomaterials. There is a fundamental difference between traditional emulsion polymerisation and a miniemulsion polymerisation. Particle formation in the former is a mixture of micellar and homogenous nucleation, particles formed via miniemulsion however are mainly formed by droplet nucleation.

 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Miniemulsion". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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