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New mechanism moving droplets at record-high speed and long distance without extra power

 

Droplet transport by surface charge density gradient
Droplet transport by surface charge density gradient

Transporting droplets on solid surfaces at high speed and long distance, even against gravity, without additional force has been a formidable task. But a research team comprising scientists from City University of Hong Kong (CityU) and three other universities and research institutes has recently devised a novel mechanism to transport droplets at record-high velocity and distance without extra energy input, and droplets can be moved upward along a vertical surface, which has never been achieved before. The new strategy to control droplet motion can open up new potential in applications in microfluidic devices, bio-analytical devices and beyond.

The conventional methods for transporting droplets include leveraging the wetting gradient on the surface to induce a driving force and move the droplet from hydrophobic to hydrophilic surface. However, the fundamental trade-off underpinning droplet hydrodynamics imposes limitations: transporting droplets at high speed necessitates a large wetting gradient and in turn is limited to a short distance, while long transport distance demands a small wetting gradient to reduce the adhesive force between the liquid and solid surface, and the transport velocity is then constrained.

To overcome these challenges, Professor Wang Zuankai of Department of Mechanical Engineering at CityU cooperated with Professor Deng Xu from the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China (UESTC) and Professor Hans-Jürgen Butt from the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research (MPI-P) in Germany, as well as researchers from the University of Science and Technology of China (USTC). They have devised a new strategy that achieves the unidirectional and self-propelled liquid droplet transportation on diverse substrates. Their work demonstrates unprecedented performances: the highest transport velocity (1.1m/s) which is ten times higher than the literature ever reported, and the longest, in principle unlimited, transport distance.

Manipulation of surface charge density

The key to this breakthrough lies in the manipulation of surface charge via liquid contact, which was realized for the first time. The research team first dropped a chain of water droplets on the specially-designed superamphiphobic (both super water- and oil-repellent) surface that they had developed before. Upon impact on the surface, the droplets immediately spread, retracted and rebounded from the surface. This resulted in the separation of electrons from the droplets, and the impacted surface became negatively charged.

By adjusting the height from which the droplets fell on the surface, the surface charge density on the surface changed gradually, forming a gradient.

When a droplet was subsequently placed on that surface, the surface charge density gradient acted as a driving force. The droplet would then self-propelled and moved towards the direction of higher charge density.

Unlike the chemical or morphological gradients which are difficult to change once they are created, the charge density gradient can be easily changed, enabling the reprogramming of droplet motion paths. The research demonstrates that high velocity and ultra-long transport of droplets can be stimulated at room temperature and does not require extra energy.

Such droplet transport not only manifests on flat surfaces, but also flexible and vertically placed ones. In addition, various liquids can be transported, including those with low surface tension, low dielectric constant, blood and salt solutions.

Application potential in microfluidic devices

"We envision that our innovation in using surface charge density gradient to program droplet transport, which was not explored before, will open up a new research direction and potential in applications. For example, in bio-medicine, the design of surfaces with preferential charge density gradient may influence cell migration and other behaviours," said Professor Wang. Professor Deng also said that this strategy could be applied in microfluidic lab-on-a-chip devices and bio-analytical devices, as well as in the fields of materials science, fluid dynamics and beyond.

The research findings are published in the latest issue of Nature Materials, titled "Surface charge printing for programmed droplet transport". The work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, Research Grants Council of Hong Kong, Max-Planck-Gesellschaft and European Research Council.

Professor Wang, together with Professor Butt from MPI-P and Professor Deng from UESTC, are the corresponding authors of the paper. The first author is PhD student Sun Qiangqiang from UESTC. Other authors include Li Yanan from CityU.

DOI number: 10.1038/s41563-019-0440-2

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