84 research outputs found

    Chemotactic behavior of catalytic motors in microfluidic channels

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    Chemotaxis in practice: Two different artificial catalytic micromotors (tubular and spherical, see scheme) show chemotactic behavior in microfluidic channels demonstrating that catalytic micromotors can sense the gradient of chemical fuel in their environment and be directed towards desired locations

    Visible Light Actuated Efficient Exclusion Between Plasmonic Ag/AgCl Micromotors and Passive Beads

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    Insight is provided into the collective behavior of visible‐light photochemically driven plasmonic Ag/AgCl Janus particles surrounded by passive polystyrene (PS) beads. The active diffusion of single Janus particles and their clusters (small: consisting of two or three Janus particles and large: consisting of more than ten Janus particles), and their interaction with passive PS beads, are analyzed experimentally and in simulations. The diffusivity of active Janus particles, and thus the exclusive effect to passive PS beads, can be regulated by the number of single Janus particles in the cluster. On the simulation side, the Langevin equations of motion for self‐propelled Janus particles and diffusing passive PS beads are numerically solved using Molecular‐Dynamics simulations. The complex interactions of both subsystems, including elastic core‐to‐core interactions, short‐range attraction, and effective repulsion due to light‐induced chemical reactions are considered. This complex mixed system not only provides insight to the interactive effect between active visible light‐driven self‐propelled micromotors and passive beads, but also offers promise for implications in light‐controlled propulsion transport and chemical sensing.Visible light actuated plasmonic Ag/AgCl‐based spherical Janus micromotors reveal efficient exclusion effects on surrounding passive beads in pure H2O. The exclusion efficiency is controlled by the number of single Janus particles composing micromotors. The system‐specific interaction parameter between Janus micromotors and passive beads is determined. It assures predictive power for further theoretical analysis of the complex dynamics of these heterogeneous active‐passive systems.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146656/1/smll201802537_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146656/2/smll201802537.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146656/3/smll201802537-sup-0001-S1.pd

    Real-Time Tracking of Individual Droplets in Multiphase Microfluidics

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    Multiphase microfluidics enables the high-throughput manipulation of droplets for multitude of applications, from the confined fabrication of nano- and micro-objects to the parallelization of chemical reactions of biomedical or biological interest. While the standard methods to follow droplets on a chip are represented by a visual observation through either optical or fluorescence microscopy, the conjunction of microfluidic platforms with miniaturized transduction mechanisms opens new ways towards the real-time and individual tracking of each independent reactor. Here we provide an overview of the most recent droplet sensing techniques, with a special focus on those based on electrical signals for an optics-less analysis

    Inverse Solidification Induced by Active Janus Particles

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    Crystals melt when thermal excitations or the concentration of defects in the lattice is sufficiently high. Upon melting, the crystalline long‐range order vanishes, turning the solid to a fluid. In contrast to this classical scenario of solid melting, here a counter‐intuitive behavior of the occurrence of crystalline long‐range order in an initially disordered matrix is demonstrated. This unusual solidification is demonstrated in a system of passive colloidal particles accommodating chemically active defects—photocatalytic Janus particles. The observed crystallization occurs when the amount of active‐defect‐induced fluctuations (which is the measure of the effective temperature) reaches critical value. The driving mechanism behind this unusual behavior is purely internal and resembles a blast‐induced solidification. Here, the role of “internal micro‐blasts” is played by the photochemical activity of defects residing in the colloidal matrix. The defect‐induced solidification occurs under non‐equilibrium conditions: the resulting solid exists as long as a constant supply of energy in the form of ion flow is provided by the catalytic photochemical reaction at the surface of active Janus particle defects. The findings could be useful for the understanding of the phase transitions of matter under extreme conditions far from thermodynamic equilibrium.Inverse solidification driven by active colloids provides novel insight into the collective effects in mixed colloidal systems. It offers versatile possibilities to address the processes of solidification in various systems out of equilibrium, including the formation of bio‐molecular condensates or biomineralization, transitions from amorphous to polycrystalline state in condensed matter, or synthesis of materials under extreme conditions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162773/3/adfm202003851.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162773/2/adfm202003851-sup-0001-SuppMat.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162773/1/adfm202003851_am.pd

    Electrochemically Exfoliated High-Quality 2H-MoS₂ for Multiflake Thin Film Flexible Biosensors

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    2D molybdenum disulfide (MoS₂) gives a new inspiration for the field of nanoelectronics, photovoltaics, and sensorics. However, the most common processing technology, e.g., liquid‐phase based scalable exfoliation used for device fabrication, leads to the number of shortcomings that impede their large area production and integration. Major challenges are associated with the small size and low concentration of MoS₂ flakes, as well as insufficient control over their physical properties, e.g., internal heterogeneity of the metallic and semiconducting phases. Here it is demonstrated that large semiconducting MoS₂ sheets (with dimensions up to 50 ”m) can be obtained by a facile cathodic exfoliation approach in nonaqueous electrolyte. The synthetic process avoids surface oxidation thus preserving the MoS₂ sheets with intact crystalline structure. It is further demonstrated at the proof‐of‐concept level, a solution‐processed large area (60 × 60 ”m) flexible Ebola biosensor, based on a MoS₂ thin film (6 ”m thickness) fabricated via restacking of the multiple flakes on the polyimide substrate. The experimental results reveal a low detection limit (in femtomolar–picomolar range) of the fabricated sensor devices. The presented exfoliation method opens up new opportunities for fabrication of large arrays of multifunctional biomedical devices based on novel 2D materials

    High‐Motility Visible Light‐Driven Ag/AgCl Janus Micromotors

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    Visible light‐driven nano/micromotors are promising candidates for biomedical and environmental applications. This study demonstrates blue light‐driven Ag/AgCl‐based spherical Janus micromotors, which couple plasmonic light absorption with the photochemical decomposition of AgCl. These micromotors reveal high motility in pure water, i.e., mean squared displacements (MSD) reaching 800 ”m2 within 8 s, which is 100× higher compared to previous visible light‐driven Janus micromotors and 7× higher than reported ultraviolet (UV) light‐driven AgCl micromotors. In addition to providing design rules to realize efficient Janus micromotors, the complex dynamics revealed by individual and assemblies of Janus motors is investigated experimentally and in simulations. The effect of suppressed rotational diffusion is focused on, compared to UV light‐driven AgCl micromotors, as a reason for this remarkable increase of the MSD. Moreover, this study demonstrates the potential of using visible light‐driven plasmonic Ag/AgCl‐based Janus micromotors in human saliva, phosphate‐buffered saline solution, the most common isotonic buffer that mimics the environment of human body fluids, and Rhodamine B solution, which is a typical polluted dye for demonstrations of photocatalytic environmental remediation. This new knowledge is useful for designing visible light driven nano/micromotors based on the surface plasmon resonance effect and their applications in assays relevant for biomedical and ecological sciences.Ag/AgCl‐based spherical Janus motors are demonstrated to reveal efficient propulsion when illuminated by visible blue light due to the surface plasmon resonance effect. The design rules to realize efficient visible‐light‐driven Janus micromotors are provided. In addition to the experimental and theoretical study of their complex dynamics, possible applications with visible light in physiological fluids and environmental remediation are highlighted.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146560/1/smll201803613-sup-0001-S1.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146560/2/smll201803613.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146560/3/smll201803613_am.pd

    Monitoring microbial metabolites using an inductively coupled resonance circuit

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    We present a new approach to monitor microbial population dynamics in emulsion droplets via changes in metabolite composition, using an inductively coupled LC resonance circuit. The signal measured by such resonance detector provides information on the magnetic field interaction with the bacterial culture, which is complementary to the information accessible by other detection means, based on electric field interaction, i.e. capacitive or resistive, as well as optical techniques. Several charge-related factors, including pH and ammonia concentrations, were identified as possible contributors to the characteristic of resonance detector profile. The setup enables probing the ionic byproducts of microbial metabolic activity at later stages of cell growth, where conventional optical detection methods have no discriminating power
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