25 research outputs found
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Flow-induced dynamic surface tension effects at nanoscale
The aim of this study is to investigate flow-induced dynamic surface tension effects, similar to the well-known Marangoni phenomena, but solely generated by the nanoscale topography of the substrates. The flow-induced surface tension effects are examined on the basis of a sharp interface theory. It is demonstrated how nanoscale objects placed at the boundary of the flow domain result in the generation of substantial surface forces acting on the bulk flow
Clustering versus percolation in the assembly of colloids coated with long DNA
We report an experimental study in which we compare the self-assembly of 1 ÎĽm colloids bridged through hybridization of complementary single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) strands (12 bp) attached to variable-length double-stranded DNA spacers that are grafted to the colloids. We considered three different spacer lengths: long spacers (48 500 bp), intermediate length spacers (7500 bp), and no spacers (in which case the ssDNA strands were directly grafted to the colloids). In all three cases, the same ssDNA pairs were used. However, confocal microscopy revealed that the aggregation behavior is very different. Upon cooling, the colloids coated with short and intermediate length DNAs undergo a phase transition to a dense amorphous phase that undergoes structural arrest shortly after percolation. In contrast, the colloids coated with the longest DNA systematically form finite-sized clusters. We speculate that the difference is due to the fact that very long DNA can easily be stretched by the amount needed to make only intracluster bonds, and in contrast, colloids coated with shorter DNA always contain free binding sites on the outside of a cluster. The grafting density of the DNA decreases strongly with increasing spacer length. This is reflected in a difference in the temperature dependence of the aggregates: for the two systems coated with long DNA, the resulting aggregates were stable against heating, whereas the colloids coated with ssDNA alone would dissociate upon heating
Comprehensive Analysis of Dewetting Profiles to Quantify Hydrodynamic Slip
Hydrodynamic slip of Newtonian liquids is a new phenomenon, the origin of
which is not yet clarified. There are various direct and indirect techniques to
measure slippage. Here we describe a method to characterize the influence of
slippage on the shape of rims surrounding growing holes in thin polymer films.
Atomic force microscopy is used to study the shape of the rim; by analyzing its
profile and applying an appropriate lubrication model we are able to determine
the slip length for polystyrene films. In the experiments we study polymer
films below the entanglement length that dewet from hydrophobized (silanized)
surfaces. We show that the slip length at the solid/liquid interface increases
with increasing viscosity. The correlation between viscosity and slip length is
dependent on the type of silanization. This indicates a link between the
molecular mechanism of the interaction of polymer chains and silane molecules
under flow conditions that we will discuss in detail.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figure