Bioinspired stimuli-responsive spindle-knotted fibers for droplet manipulation

Bioinspired stimuli-responsive spindle-knotted fibers

Schematic illustration

Abstract

Manipulation of small amounts of liquids is of great importance in bio/chemical analysis, environmental engineering, medical diagnostics, etc. Novel platforms with systematic maneuverability and expanded applications are highly desired. Here, inspired by the directional liquid motion ability of natural fibrous materials, we present light-responsive spindle-knotted microfibers from piezoelectric microfluidics for droplet manipulation. Thegraphene oxide (GO) and poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) [poly(NIPAM)] components endow the fiber with nearinfrared (NIR) stimuli-responsiveness. Besides, its unique structure enables droplet pinning in the knots of the fiber. During NIR irradiation, the fiber can shrink and turn hydrophobic, which resulted in directional dropletmigration from one knot to another. Based on this phenomenon, controllable droplet merging could be initiated under light control, and chemical reactions could be carried out on-site. More intriguingly, systematic manipulation of droplet pathways was achieved through a woven fiber network, by which multi-step reactions couldoccur orderly. These features indicated that the bio-inspired photo-controllable spindle-knotted fibers would find vast opportunities in broad applications, such as micro-reactors and optofluidic systems.

Publication
Chemical Engineering Journal
Chaoyu Yang
Chaoyu Yang
Research Assistant Professor of MAE

My research interests include microfluidics, fluid dynamics, nature-inspired engineering, droplet, wettablity.