Issue 5, 2017

Wrinkling of milk skin is mediated by evaporation

Abstract

Wrinkling of thin films and membranes can occur due to various mechanisms such as growth and/or mismatch between the mechanical properties of the film and substrate. However, the physical origins of dynamic wrinkling in soft membranes are still not fully understood. Here we use milk skin as a tractable experimental system to investigate the physics of wrinkle formation in a thin, poroelastic film. Upon heating milk, a micron-thick hydrogel of denatured proteins and fat globules forms at the air–water interface. Over time, we observe an increase in the total length of wrinkles. By confocal imaging and profilometry, we determine that the composition and thickness of the milk skin appears to be homogeneous over the length scale of the wrinkles, excluding differences in milk skin composition as a major contributor to wrinkling. To explain the physical origins of wrinkle growth, we describe theory that considers the milk skin as a thin, poroelastic film where pressure is generated by the evaporative-driven flow of solvent across the film; this imparts in-plane stresses in the milk skin, which cause wrinkling. Viscous effects can explain the time-dependent growth of wrinkles. Our theoretical predictions of the effects of relative humidity on the total length of wrinkles over time are consistent with our experimental results. Our findings provide insight into the physics of the common phenomenon of milk skin wrinkling, and identify hydration gradients as another physical mechanism that can drive morphological instabilities in soft matter.

Graphical abstract: Wrinkling of milk skin is mediated by evaporation

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Sep 2016
Accepted
12 Dec 2016
First published
16 Dec 2016

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 1056-1062

Wrinkling of milk skin is mediated by evaporation

A. A. Evans, E. Cheung, K. D. Nyberg and A. C. Rowat, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 1056 DOI: 10.1039/C6SM02102F

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