4.8 Article

Photocontrol of fluid slugs in liquid crystal polymer microactuators

Journal

NATURE
Volume 537, Issue 7619, Pages 179-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature19344

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51225304, 21134003, 21273048]
  2. Shanghai Outstanding Academic Leaders Plan [15XD1500600]

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The manipulation of small amounts of liquids has applications ranging from biomedical devices to liquid transfer. Direct light-driven manipulation of liquids, especially when triggered by light-induced capillary forces, is of particular interest because light can provide contactless spatial and temporal control. However, existing light-driven technologies suffer from an inherent limitation in that liquid motion is strongly resisted by the effect of contact-line pinning. Here we report a strategy to manipulate fluid slugs by photo-induced asymmetric deformation of tubular microactuators, which induces capillary forces for liquid propulsion. Microactuators with various shapes (straight, 'Y'-shaped, serpentine and helical) are fabricated from a mechanically robust linear liquid crystal polymer. These microactuators are able to exert photocontrol of a wide diversity of liquids over a long distance with controllable velocity and direction, and hence to mix multiphase liquids, to combine liquids and even to make liquids run uphill. We anticipate that this photodeformable microactuator will find use in micro-reactors, in laboratory-on-a-chip settings and in micro-optomechanical systems.

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