119 research outputs found

    Electrowetting: from basics to applications

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    Electrowetting has become one of the most widely used tools for manipulating tiny amounts of liquids on surfaces. Applications range from 'lab-on-a-chip' devices to adjustable lenses and new kinds of electronic displays. In the present article, we review the recent progress in this rapidly growing field including both fundamental and applied aspects. We compare the various approaches used to derive the basic electrowetting equation, which has been shown to be very reliable as long as the applied voltage is not too high. We discuss in detail the origin of the electrostatic forces that induce both contact angle reduction and the motion of entire droplets. We examine the limitations of the electrowetting equation and present a variety of recent extensions to the theory that account for distortions of the liquid surface due to local electric fields, for the finite penetration depth of electric fields into the liquid, as well as for finite conductivity effects in the presence of AC voltage. The most prominent failure of the electrowetting equation, namely the saturation of the contact angle at high voltage, is discussed in a separate section. Recent work in this direction indicates that a variety of distinct physical effectsÂżrather than a unique oneÂżare responsible for the saturation phenomenon, depending on experimental details. In the presence of suitable electrode patterns or topographic structures on the substrate surface, variations of the contact angle can give rise not only to continuous changes of the droplet shape, but also to discontinuous morphological transitions between distinct liquid morphologies. The dynamics of electrowetting are discussed briefly. Finally, we give an overview of recent work aimed at commercial applications, in particular in the fields of adjustable lenses, display technology, fibre optics, and biotechnology-related microfluidic devices

    An extremal model for amorphous media plasticity

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    An extremal model for the plasticity of amorphous materials is studied in a simple two-dimensional anti-plane geometry. The steady-state is analyzed through numerical simulations. Long-range spatial and temporal correlations in local slip events are shown to develop, leading to non-trivial and highly anisotropic scaling laws. In particular, the plastic strain is shown to statistically concentrate over a region which tends to align perpendicular to the displacement gradient. By construction, the model can be seen as giving rise to a depinning transition, the threshold of which (i.e. the macroscopic yield stress) also reveal scaling properties reflecting the localization of the activity.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Wetting Heterogeneities in Porous Media Control Flow Dissipation

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    Pressure-controlled displacement of an oil-water interface is studied in dense packings of functionalized glass beads with well-defined spatial wettability correlations. An enhanced dissipation is observed if the typical extension Ο of the same-type wetting domains is smaller than the average bead diameter d. Three-dimensional imaging using x-ray microtomography shows that the frequencies n(s) of residual droplet volumes s for different Ο collapse onto the same curve. This indicates that the additional dissipation for small Ο is due to contact line pinning rather than an increase of capillary break-up and coalescence events

    Atorvastatin treatment is effective when used in combination with mefloquine in an experimental cerebral malaria murine model

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>One of the major complications of <it>Plasmodium falciparum </it>infection is cerebral malaria (CM), which causes one million deaths worldwide each year, results in long-term neurological sequelae and the treatment for which is only partially effective. Statins are recognized to have an immunomodulatory action, attenuate sepsis and have a neuroprotective effect. Atorvastatin (AVA) has shown in vitro anti-malarial activity and has improved the activity of mefloquine (MQ) and quinine.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The efficiency of 40 mg/kg intraperitoneal AVA, alone or in association with MQ, was assessed in an experimental <it>Plasmodium berghei </it>ANKA rodent parasite model of CM and performed according to different therapeutic schemes. The effects on experimental CM were assessed through the evaluation of brain histopathological changes and neuronal apoptosis by TUNEL staining.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>AVA alone in the therapeutic scheme show no effect on survival, but the prophylactic scheme employing AVA associated with MQ, rather than MQ alone, led to a significant delay in mouse death and had an effect on the onset of CM symptoms and on the level of parasitaemia. Histopathological findings show a correlation between brain lesions and CM onset. A neuronal anti-apoptotic effect of AVA in the AVA + MQ combination was not shown.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The combination of AVA and MQ therapy led to a significant delay in mouse mortality. There were differences in the incidence, time to cerebral malaria and the level of parasitaemia when the drug combination was administered to mice. When used in combination with MQ, AVA had a relevant effect on the in vivo growth inhibition and clinical outcome of <it>P. berghei </it>ANKA-infected mice.</p

    High-throughput triggered merging of surfactant-stabilized droplet pairs using traveling surface acoustic waves

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    We present an acoustofluidic device for fluorescently triggered merging of surfactant-stabilized picoliter droplet pairs at high throughput. Droplets that exceed a preset fluorescence threshold level are selectively merged by a traveling surface acoustic wave (T-SAW) pulse. We characterize the operation of our device by analyzing the merging efficiency as a function of acoustic pulse position, duration, and acoustic pressure amplitude. We probe droplet merging at different droplet rates and find that efficient merging occurs above a critical acoustic power level. Our results indicate that the efficiency of acoustically induced merging of surfactant stabilized droplets is correlated with acoustic streaming velocity. Finally, we discuss how both time-averaged and instantaneous acoustic pressure fields can affect the integrity of surfactant layers. Our technique, by allowing the merging of up to 105 droplets per hour, shows great potential for integration into microfluidic systems for high-throughput and high-content screening applications

    Influence of oxygen on asexual blood cycle and susceptibility of Plasmodium falciparum to chloroquine: requirement of a standardized in vitro assay

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    OBJECTIVE: The main objective of this study was to assess the influence of gas mixtures on in vitro Plasmodium falciparum growth and 50% inhibitory concentration (IC(50)) for chloroquine. METHODS: The study was performed between February 2004 and December 2005. 136 Plasmodium falciparum isolates were used to evaluate gas mixtures effect on IC(50 )for chloroquine by isotopic microtest. The oxygen effect on asexual blood cycle of 3D7 and W2 clones was determined by thin blood smears examination and tritiated hypoxanthine uptake. RESULTS: From 5% O(2 )to 21% O(2 )conditions, no parasiticide effect of O(2 )concentration was observed in vitro on the clones 3D7 and W2. A parasitostatic effect was observed during the exposure of mature trophozoĂŻtes and schizonts at 21% O(2 )with an increase in the length of schizogony. The chloroquine IC(50 )at 10% O(2 )were significantly higher than those at 21% O(2), means of 173.5 nM and 121.5 nM respectively (p < 0.0001). In particular of interest, among the 63 isolates that were in vitro resistant to chloroquine (IC(50 )> 100 nM) at 10% O(2), 17 were sensitive to chloroquine (IC(50 )< 100 nM) at 21% O(2). CONCLUSION: Based on these results, laboratories should use the same gas mixture to realize isotopic microtest. Further studies on comparison of isotopic and non-isotopic assays are needed to establish a standardized in vitro assay protocol to survey malaria drug resistance

    Confining Trypanosoma brucei in emulsion droplets reveals population variabilities in division rates and improves in vitro cultivation

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    Trypanosome parasites are infecting mammals in Sub-Saharan Africa and are transmitted between hosts through bites of the tsetse fly. The transmission from the insect vector to the mammal host causes a number of metabolic and physiological changes. A fraction of the population continuously adapt to the immune system of the host, indicating heterogeneity at the population level. Yet, the cell to cell variability in populations is mostly unknown. We develop here an analytical method for quantitative measurements at the single cell level based on encapsulation and cultivation of single-cell Trypanosoma brucei in emulsion droplets. We first show that mammalian stage trypanosomes survive for several hours to days in droplets, with an influence of droplet size on both survival and growth. We unravel various growth patterns within a population and find that droplet cultivation of trypanosomes results in 10-fold higher cell densities of the highest dividing cell variants compared to standard cultivation techniques. Some variants reach final cell titers in droplets closer to what is observed in nature than standard culture, of practical interest for cell production. Droplet microfluidics is therefore a promising tool for trypanosome cultivation and analysis with further potential for high-throughput single cell trypanosome analysis

    Bilan des connaissances sur les conséquences écologiques des invasions de plantes a l'ßle de la réunion (archipel des mascareignes, océan indien)

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    Assessment of ecological consequences of plant invasions on RĂ©union Island (Mascarene Archipelago, Indian Ocean). In western Indian Ocean, Reunion Island remains a hotspot for biological conservation. Such a biological value is mainly threatened by invasion of alien species. Knowledge of ecological consequences of exotic plant invasions has been assessed, in order to suggest guidelines withstanding a regional strategy for invasive plant management. Despite a strong variability of used methods, studies agree on a general impoverishment of species communities and a decrease of natural regeneration. They plead for prioritizing invasive plants. Ecological impact mainly consists in competition between exotic and native plants, and in alteration of primary and secondary successions. Some introduced species act as refuges for some native animal species but the impact of invasive plants on animal communities remains poorly documented. Additionally, the role of human activities in plant invasions (e.g., fluxes of plant species between landscape units) is scarcely studied. A regional strategy developed at the South-eastern Indian Ocean level is recommended, based on both prevention programmes (e.g., control of species introduction, early detecting) and public informationL'Ăźle de la RĂ©union prĂ©sente un intĂ©rĂȘt majeur pour la conservation des ressources biologiques dans l'ouest de l'ocĂ©an Indien. Ce patrimoine biologique reste menacĂ© au premier rang par les invasions d'espĂšces introduites. Un bilan des mĂ©thodes et des rĂ©sultats relatifs aux Ă©tudes traitant de la connaissance des consĂ©quences Ă©cologiques des invasions de plantes exotiques y a Ă©tĂ© entrepris, afin de dĂ©gager des Ă©lĂ©ments gĂ©nĂ©raux de stratĂ©gie relatifs au contrĂŽle de ces espĂšces. MalgrĂ© une forte variabilitĂ© mĂ©thodologique, les Ă©tudes convergent vers un appauvrissement des communautĂ©s d'espĂšces et une diminution de la rĂ©gĂ©nĂ©ration naturelle, et invitent Ă  une rĂ©actualisation de la hiĂ©rarchisation des prioritĂ©s d'intervention. Les modes d'impact rĂ©vĂ©lĂ©s mettent principalement en Ă©vidence une compĂ©tition entre les espĂšces exotiques et indigĂšnes ainsi qu'une altĂ©ration des successions primaires et secondaires. Certaines espĂšces introduites assurent un rĂŽle de refuge Ă  l'Ă©gard d'espĂšces animales indigĂšnes mais l'impact gĂ©nĂ©ral des plantes invasives sur les communautĂ©s animales reste sous-Ă©tudiĂ©. De mĂȘme, la place des activitĂ©s humaines, notamment dans le cadre de flux d'espĂšces entre diffĂ©rents compartiments du paysage, reste peu envisagĂ©e. Les mĂ©thodes de lutte prĂ©ventive, basĂ©es sur le contrĂŽle des introductions et la dĂ©tection prĂ©coce, en relais avec des actions de sensibilisation, apparaissent comme les Ă©lĂ©ments centraux d'une stratĂ©gie de contrĂŽle des plantes invasives qui pourrait ĂȘtre mise en oeuvre Ă  l'Ă©chelle du sud-est de l'ocĂ©an Indien
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