4.6 Article

Light-Driven Formation and Rupture of Droplet Bilayers

Journal

LANGMUIR
Volume 26, Issue 9, Pages 6193-6200

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/la1010067

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SRI International
  2. NIH [R21CA133537]
  3. NSF

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We demonstrate the optical manipubtion of nanoliter aqueous droplets containing surfactant or lipid molecules and immersed in an organic liquid using near-infrared light. The resulting emulsion droplets are manipulated using both the thermocapillary effect and convective fluid motion. Droplet-pair interactions induced in the emulsion upon optical initiation and control provide direct observations of the coalescence steps in intricate detail. Droplet droplet adhesion (bilayer formation) is observed under several conditions. Selective bilayer rupture is also realized using the same infrared laser. The technique provides a novel approach to studying thin film drainage and interface stability in emulsion dynamics. The formation of stable lipid bilayers at the adhesion interface between interacting water droplets can provide an optical platform on which to build droplet-based lipid bilayer assays. The technique also has relevance to understanding and improving microfluidics applications by devising Petri dish-based droplet assays requiring no substrate fabrication.

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