How fast do microdroplets generated during liquid-liquid phase separation move in a confined 2D space?
Gilmar F. Arends, John M. Shaw, Xuehua Zhang

TL;DR
This study investigates the speed and movement of microdroplets formed during liquid-liquid phase separation in a confined 2D space, highlighting the role of composition gradients in driving rapid microdroplet motion.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how composition gradients influence microdroplet dynamics during phase separation in confined environments.
Findings
Microdroplets can reach speeds up to ~150 μm/s.
Oil-rich microdroplets move faster in higher initial oil concentrations.
Sharp ethanol composition gradients drive rapid microdroplet movement.
Abstract
How liquid transport occurs in confined spaces is relevant to many industrial and lab-scale processes, ranging from enhanced oil recovery to drug delivery systems. In this work, we investigate propelling microdroplets that form from liquid-liquid phase separation in a quasi-2D chamber, focusing on the direction and speed of microdroplets in response to local composition gradients. The confined ternary solution in our experiments comprises a model oil, a good solvent (ethanol) and a poor solvent (water). Depending on the initial solution composition, water-rich or oil-rich microdroplets, form and move spontaneously as the ternary solution mixes with and is displaced by water diffusing from a deep side channel. Microdroplet movement is followed in situ using high-speed bright-field imaging or fluorescence imaging when the solution is doped with a dye. Local ethanol composition gradients…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
