Intermittent air invasion in pervaporating compliant microchannels
Ludovic Keiser, Philippe Marmottant, Benjamin Dollet

TL;DR
This study investigates the intermittent air invasion in compliant microchannels driven by pervaporation, revealing elastocapillary coupling effects and mimicking plant embolism prevention mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel microfluidic design that models plant-like air embolism arrest, highlighting elastocapillary interactions in pervaporating microchannels.
Findings
Air invasion is intermittent and jerky due to elastocapillary effects.
Channel geometry influences arrest time and jump length.
Microfluidic model mimics plant embolism control mechanisms.
Abstract
We explore air invasion in an initially water-filled dead-end compliant microchannel containing a constriction. The phenomenon is driven by the pervaporation of the liquid present in the channel through the surrounding medium. The penetration is intermittent, jerky, and characterised by a stop-and-go dynamics as the bubble escapes the constriction. We demonstrate that this sequence of arrest and jump of the bubble is due to an elastocapillary coupling between the air-liquid interface and the elastic medium. When the interface enters the constriction, its curvature strongly increases, leading to a depression within the liquid-filled channel which drives a compression of the channel. As the interface is forced to leave the constriction at a given threshold, due to the ongoing loss of liquid content by pervaporation, the pressure is suddenly released, which gives rise to a rapid…
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