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Manipulation of droplets has increasingly garnered global attention, owing to its multifarious potential applications, including microfluidics and medical diagnostic tests. To control the droplet motion, geometry-gradient-based passive transport has emerged as a well-established strategy, which induces a Laplace pressure difference based on the droplet radius differences in confined state and transport droplets with no consumption of external energy, whereas this transportation method has inevitably shown some critical limitations: unidirectionality, uncontrollability, short moving distance, and low velocity. Herein, a magnetocontrollable lubricant-infused microwall array (MLIMA) is designed as a key solution to this issue. In the absence of a magnetic field, droplets can spontaneously travel from the tip toward the root of the structure as a result of the geometry-gradient-induced Laplace pressure difference. When the subject of an external magnetic field, the microwalls bend and overlap sequentially, ultimately resulting in the formation of a continuous slippery meniscus surface. The formed meniscus surface can exert sufficient propulsive force to surmount the Laplace pressure difference of the droplet, thereby effectuating active transport. Through the continuous movement of the microwalls, droplets can be actively transported against the Laplace pressure difference from the root to the tip side of the MLIMA or continue to actively move to the root after finishing the passive self-transport. This work demonstrates passive/active hybrid bidirectional droplet transport capabilities, validates its feasibility in the accurate control of droplet manipulation, and exhibits great potential in chemical microreactions, bioassays, and the medical field.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.3c00692 | DOI Listing |
Adv Mater
September 2025
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Clean Pulp & Papermaking and Pollution Control, School of Light Industry and Food Engineering, Guangxi University, Nanning, 530004, China.
Triboelectric sweat sensors, endowed with the technical advantages of non-invasive ex vivo and in situ detection, have catalyzed the rapid advancement of personalized medicine and precision health management systems. However, the inherently low secretion rate and rapid evaporation of sweat pose significant challenges for its efficient collection and rapid analytical screening. This study leverages laser cutting and aqueous interfacial self-assembly strategies to develop a biomimetic heterogeneous wettability triboelectric material (HWTM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
September 2025
Institute for Technical Thermodynamics, Technical University of Darmstadt, Darmstadt 64287, Germany.
Known droplet jumping phenomena include coalescence-induced jumping, single-droplet jumping of partially constrained droplets due to a mismatch in Laplace pressure, and evaporation-induced trampolining. In this study, we introduce a novel droplet jumping phenomenon, in which multiple microdroplets jump nearly simultaneously from superhydrophobic colloidal rafts. This phenomenon is triggered by a coalescence of a microdroplet with the underlying water, which generates a radially propagating capillary wave.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicromachines (Basel)
July 2025
Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Intelligent Equipment for South China Sea Marine Ranching, Guangdong Ocean University, Zhanjiang 524088, China.
Firstly, this paper reviews the fundamental theories of solid surface wettability and contact angle hysteresis. Subsequently, it further introduces four typical wettability-engineered surfaces with low hysteresis (superhydrophobic, superamphiphobic, super-slippery, and liquid-like smooth surfaces). Finally, it focuses on the latest research progress in the field of droplet manipulation on open planar surfaces with engineered wettability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2025
Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, LIPhy, Grenoble 38000, France.
Aqueous foams are solid materials composed of gases and liquids, exhibiting a large gas/liquid surface area and enabling dynamic exchanges between their fluid components. The structure of binary-gas foams, whose bubbles consist of a mixture of two gases having different affinities with the liquid, thus offers real potential for the dynamic separation of these gases at low cost. In single-gas foams, the structure evolves under the effect of gas flow induced by Laplace pressure differences, arising from heterogeneities in bubble size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
September 2025
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon 97239, United States.
We develop a new linear-regression-based method for determining surface tension, γ, from interfacial curvature. Across a static fluid-fluid interface, γ is balanced by the difference in hydrostatic pressure, Δ. The balance is described by the Young-Laplace relation: Δ = γ (1 + 2), where 1 + 2 is the sum of the principal interfacial curvatures.
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