4.8 Article

Stimuli-Responsive Liquid-Crystal-Infused Porous Surfaces for Manipulation of Underwater Gas Bubble Transport and Adhesion

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 34, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202110085

Keywords

gas-bubble adhesion; gas-bubble transport; liquid crystals; lubricated surfaces; stimuli responsive materials

Funding

  1. OSU
  2. OSU Institute for Materials Research Kickstart Facility Grant
  3. Davidson School of Chemical Engineering
  4. College of Engineering at Purdue University
  5. Purdue University Center for Cancer Research [P30CA023168]
  6. Purdue Institute for Integrative Neuroscience (PIIN)
  7. Bindley Biosciences Center
  8. Walther Cancer Foundation

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This article introduces the design and synthesis method of using thermotropic liquid crystals to manipulate underwater gas bubbles, analyzes the effects of liquid crystal phases on bubble transport and adhesion, and explores the potential applications of liquid crystal-infused porous surfaces.
Biomimetic artificial surfaces that enable the manipulation of gas bubble mobility have been explored in a wide range of applications in nanomaterial synthesis, surface defouling, biomedical diagnostics, and therapeutics. Although many superhydrophobic surfaces and isotropic-lubricant-infused porous surfaces have been developed to manipulate gas bubbles, the simultaneous control over the adhesion and transport of gas bubbles underwater remains a challenge. Thermotropic liquid crystals (LCs), a class of structured fluids, provide an opportunity to tune the behavior of gas bubbles through LC mesophase transitions using a variety of external stimuli. Using this central idea, the design and synthesis of LC-infused porous surfaces (LCIPS) is reported and the effects of the LC mesophase on the transport and adhesion of gas bubbles on LCIPS immersed in water elucidated. LCIPS are demonstrated to be a promising class of surfaces with an unprecedented level of responsiveness and functionality, which enables the design of cyanobacteria-inspired object movement, smart catalysts, and bubble gating devices to sense and sort volatile organic compounds and control oxygen levels in biomimetic cell cultures.

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