Emulsion
An emulsion is a heterogeneous mixture of two immiscible liquids in which one liquid is dispersed as droplets within the other. The dispersed phase forms droplets that range from submicrometer to several micrometers in diameter within the continuous external phase. Emulsions are typically stabilized by emulsifiers—surface-active agents that adsorb at the liquid–liquid interface and reduce interfacial tension to form a protective interfacial film.
Two common types are oil-in-water (O/W), where oil droplets are dispersed in water, and water-in-oil (W/O), where
Stability is not thermodynamically favored, so emulsions tend to separate over time by creaming or sedimentation,
Emulsification is achieved through high-shear mixing, homogenization, microfluidization, ultrasonic dispersion, or phase-inversion techniques that can alter
Applications span food, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, paints, and agrochemicals. Emulsions are also used in drug delivery and