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Background: The Diplolepideae are the larger group within the Arthrodontae mosses, characterized by peristomes formed from residual cell walls. It is now understood that these peristomes exhibit diverse hygroscopic movements, playing a crucial role in spore release. However, the exact mechanism behind this movement remains unclear, lacking direct evidence. This study investigated the microscopic and submicroscopic structures of the peristomes in three Diplolepideae species: Hypopterygium fauriei (Besch.), Pylaisia levieri (Müll. Hal.) Arikawa and Regmatodon declinatus (Hook.) Brid. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were used to reveal the differences in their hygroscopic movement mechanisms.
Results: The three species exhibited distinct responses upon wetting: H. fauriei's exostome closed inwards, P. levieri' opened outwards, and R. declinatus' elongated significantly. These differences are attributed to the varying microfibril deposition in the exostome layers. Uniform deposition in the inner layer and minimal deposition in the outer layer enabled exostome opening upon wetting and closing when dry. Our findings suggest that the diastole and contraction of fine microfibrils in the exostome plates and ridges are the key drivers of hygroscopic movement.
Conclusions: This study provides further evidence at both the structural and submicroscopic levels, contributing to the unraveling of the hygroscopic movement mechanism in Diplolepideae peristomes. This enhanced understanding sheds light on the relationship between peristome structure and function.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12870-024-05407-8 | DOI Listing |
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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.
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August 2025
Electronic Information School, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430072, China.
Flexible hydrogel sensors demonstrate emerging applications, such as wearable electronics, soft robots, and humidity smart devices, but their further application is limited due to their single-responsive behavior and unstable, low-sensitivity signal output. This study develops a dual-responsive starch-based conductive hydrogel via a facile "one-pot" strategy, achieving mechanically robust pressure sensing and ultra-sensitive humidity detection. The starch-Poly (2,3-dihydrothieno-1,4-dioxin)-poly (styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS)-glutaraldehyde (SPG) hydrogel integrates physical entanglement and covalent crosslinking to form a porous dual-network architecture, exhibiting high compressive fracture stress (266 kPa), and stable electromechanical sensitivity (ΔI/I, ~2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
August 2025
School of Textiles and Fashion, Shanghai University of Engineering Science, Shanghai 201620, China. Electronic address:
Electronic skin (e-skin) faces challenges in achieving long-term signal stability and wearability due to the poor breathability, sweat accumulation, and limited sensitivity. This paper reports a multifunctional nanofibrous e-skin (PTZ-PPPB-PPT) fabricated via layer-by-layer electrospinning, integrating a hydrophobic layer (PVDF-TrFE/ZnO), a piezoelectric enhancement layer (PAN/PVP/PDA@BTO), and a thermochromic layer (PAN/PVP/TCM). Benefited from the asymmetric wettability and hierarchical fiber structure, the device enables unidirectional sweat transport (contact angle reduces from 132.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
July 2025
Department of Smart Manufacturing Engineering, Changwon National University, Changwon 51140, Republic of Korea.
The coffee-ring effect, while harnessed in diverse fields such as biosensing and printing, poses challenges for achieving uniform particle deposition. Controlling this phenomenon is thus essential for precision patterning. This study proposes a novel method to regulate coffee-ring formation by tuning surface wettability via integrated nanoporous and hexagonal microstructures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
July 2025
Laboratory of Nano and Microfluidics and Microsystems, LabMEMS, Mechanical Engineering Dept., POLI and COPPE, UFRJ, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
The physics and modelling of cooling and freezing of droplets in contact with a colder substrate are of interest in various engineering applications. This work provides experimental results of this process employing infrared thermography for temperature measurements at the droplet's surface. Also, a high-speed camera is employed to observe the recalescence period and measure the freezing front movement and the droplet shape change.
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