Brownian motion on an out-of-thermal-equilibrium surface
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The motion of colloidal species on an out-of-thermal equilibrium surface is studied experimentally by optical microscopy. Water droplets of size in the micrometer range, spontaneously formed at a spherical-like interface between water and oil, are the colloidal species. The interface appears as a convex meniscus when putting water on oil with an added nonionic surfactant. Since the water density is greater than that of oil, the interface is produced into the oil. The spontaneously formed water droplets move attached to the interface while still growing from submicrometer sizes to a few micrometers. Although the dynamic nature of the process, with both the interface and the particles still changing, produces heterogeneities in the system, anomalous diffusion was not observed. The motion of the droplets has a well-identified Brownian component with a Gaussian distribution of steps due to the thermal agitation of the media surrounding the droplets and a drift component due to the effect of gravity. © 2022 American Physical Society.
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Brownian movement; Micrometers; Nonionic surfactants; Thermodynamics; Anomalous diffusion; Brownian; Dynamic nature; Micrometer ranges; Submicrometers; Thermal agitation; Thermal-equilibrium; Water density; Water droplets; Drops
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