4.5 Article

Gradient Droplet Arrays by Acceleration-Mode Dip-Coating

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS INTERFACES
Volume 9, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/admi.202200667

Keywords

biphilic surfaces; combinatorial chemistry; droplet microarray technology; high-throughput screening; parallelization of experiments

Funding

  1. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF122]
  2. Villum Foundation [9301]
  3. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF17OC0026910]
  4. Harvard University Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) [DMR-2011754]
  5. DTU Health Tech

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A method of producing droplet arrays with gradients in droplet height by dip-coating uniformly patterned biphilic substrates in acceleration-mode has been developed, allowing for the adjustment of droplet characteristics and demonstrating promising applications in experiments.
Droplet microarray technology is of great interest in biology and chemistry as it allows for significant reactant savings and massive parallelization of experiments. Upon scaling down the footprint of each droplet in an array, it becomes increasingly challenging to produce the array drop-by-drop. Therefore, techniques for parallelized droplet production are developed, e.g., dip-coating of biphilic substrates. However, it is in general difficult to tailor the characteristics of individual droplets, such as size and content, without updating the substrate. Here, the method of dip-coating of uniformly patterned biphilic substrates in so-called acceleration-mode to produce droplet arrays featuring gradients in droplet height for fixed droplet footprint is developed. The results herein present this method applied to produce drops with base diameters varying over orders of magnitude, from as high as 6 mm to as small as 50 mu m; importantly, the experimentally measured power-law-dependency of volume on capillary-number matches analytical theory for droplet formation on heterogenous substrates though the precise quantitative values likely differ due to 2D substrate patterning. Gradient characteristics, including average droplet volume, steepness of the gradient, and its monotonicity, can all be tuned by changing the dip-coating parameters, thus providing a robust method for high-throughput screening applications and experiments.

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