janus droplet
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caleb Meredith ◽  
Alexander Castonguay ◽  
Yu-Jen Chiu ◽  
Allan M. Brooks ◽  
Pepijn Moerman ◽  
...  

<p>The study of active colloidal microswimmers with tunable phoretic and self-organizational behaviors is important for understanding out-of-equilibrium systems and the design of functional, adaptive matter. Solubilizing, self-propelling droplets have emerged as a rich chemical platform for exploration of active behaviors, but isotropic droplets rely on spontaneous symmetry breaking to sustain motion. The introduction of permanent asymmetry, e.g. in the form of a biphasic Janus droplet, has not been explored previously as a comprehensive design strategy for active droplets, despite the widespread use of Janus structures in motile solid particles. Here, we uncover the chemomechanical framework underlying the self-propulsion of active, biphasic Janus oil droplets solubilizing in aqueous surfactant. We elucidate how droplet propulsion is influenced by the degree of oil mixing, droplet shape, and oil solubilization rates for a range of oil combinations. A key finding is that for droplets containing both a mobile (solubilizing) and non-mobile oil, the degree of partitioning of the mobile oil across the Janus droplets’ oil-oil interface plays a pivotal role in determining the droplet speed and swimming direction. As a result, we observe propulsion speeds of Janus droplets more than an order-of-magnitude faster than chasing pairs of single emulsion droplets which lack an oil-oil interface. In addition, spatiotemporal control over droplet swimming speed and orientation is demonstrated through the application of local thermal gradients applied via induced via joule heading and laser spot illumination. We also explore the interactions between collections of Janus droplets including the spontaneous formation of multi-droplet spinning clusters that rotate predictably based on symmetry. Our findings provide key insights as to how the chemistry and structure of multiphase fluids can be harnessed to design microswimmers with programmable active and collective behaviors.</p><br>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caleb Meredith ◽  
Alexander Castonguay ◽  
Yu-Jen Chiu ◽  
Allan M. Brooks ◽  
Pepijn Moerman ◽  
...  

<p>The study of active colloidal microswimmers with tunable phoretic and self-organizational behaviors is important for understanding out-of-equilibrium systems and the design of functional, adaptive matter. Solubilizing, self-propelling droplets have emerged as a rich chemical platform for exploration of active behaviors, but isotropic droplets rely on spontaneous symmetry breaking to sustain motion. The introduction of permanent asymmetry, e.g. in the form of a biphasic Janus droplet, has not been explored previously as a comprehensive design strategy for active droplets, despite the widespread use of Janus structures in motile solid particles. Here, we uncover the chemomechanical framework underlying the self-propulsion of active, biphasic Janus oil droplets solubilizing in aqueous surfactant. We elucidate how droplet propulsion is influenced by the degree of oil mixing, droplet shape, and oil solubilization rates for a range of oil combinations. A key finding is that for droplets containing both a mobile (solubilizing) and non-mobile oil, the degree of partitioning of the mobile oil across the Janus droplets’ oil-oil interface plays a pivotal role in determining the droplet speed and swimming direction. As a result, we observe propulsion speeds of Janus droplets more than an order-of-magnitude faster than chasing pairs of single emulsion droplets which lack an oil-oil interface. In addition, spatiotemporal control over droplet swimming speed and orientation is demonstrated through the application of local thermal gradients applied via induced via joule heading and laser spot illumination. We also explore the interactions between collections of Janus droplets including the spontaneous formation of multi-droplet spinning clusters that rotate predictably based on symmetry. Our findings provide key insights as to how the chemistry and structure of multiphase fluids can be harnessed to design microswimmers with programmable active and collective behaviors.</p><br>


Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 149
Author(s):  
Fan Bai ◽  
Hongna Zhang ◽  
Xiaobin Li ◽  
Fengchen Li ◽  
Sang Woo Joo

Droplets composed of two different materials, or Janus droplets, have diverse applications, including microfluidic digital laboratory systems, DNA chips, and self-assembly systems. A three-dimensional computational study of Janus droplet formation in a double Y-type microfluidic device filled with a shear-thinning fluid is performed by using the multiphaseInterDyMFoam solver of the OpenFOAM, based on a finite-volume method. The bi-phase volume-of-fluid method is adopted to track the interface with an adaptive dynamic mesh refinement for moving interfaces. The formation of Janus droplets in the shear-thinning fluid is characterized in five different states of tubbing, jetting, intermediate, dripping and unstable dripping in a multiphase microsystem under various flow conditions. The formation mechanism of Janus droplets is understood by analyzing the influencing factors, including the flow rates of the continuous phase and of the dispersed phase, surface tension, and non-Newtonian rheological parameters. Studies have found that the formation of the Janus droplets and their sizes are related to the flow rate at the inlet under low capillary numbers. The rheological parameters of shear-thinning fluid have a significant impact on the size of Janus droplets and their formation mechanism. As the apparent viscosity increases, the frequency of Janus droplet formation increases, while the droplet volume decreases. Compared with Newtonian fluid, the Janus droplet is more readily generated in shear-thinning fluid due to the interlay of diminishing viscous force, surface tension, and pressure drop.


2021 ◽  
Vol 406 ◽  
pp. 126098
Author(s):  
Hao Wang ◽  
Gengming Jiang ◽  
Qing Han ◽  
Yi Cheng

2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiao-Yuan LIAN ◽  
Su-Xia ZHENG ◽  
Zhong-Bin XU ◽  
Xiao-Dong RUAN

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