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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

water
droplets
are
dispersed
in
oil.
Examples
include
milk
and
many
salad
dressings
(O/W)
as
well
as
butter
and
certain
creams
(W/O).
Emulsions
can
also
involve
solid
particles
at
the
interface,
giving
rise
to
Pickering
emulsions.
coalescence
of
droplets,
flocculation,
or
Ostwald
ripening.
Stability
is
enhanced
by
appropriate
emulsifiers,
proteins,
or
solid
stabilizers,
by
controlling
droplet
size
and
distribution,
and
by
using
electrostatic
or
steric
stabilization
through
charged
species
or
polymers.
The
interfacial
film
strength
and
droplet
charge
(zeta
potential)
influence
longevity.
the
phase
type
(O/W
vs
W/O).
Characterization
focuses
on
droplet
size
distribution,
rheology,
and
interfacial
tension.
parenteral
nutrition,
where
biocompatible
oil
and
water
phases
enable
controlled
release
and
transport.