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Optical Manipulation of Liquids by Thermal Marangoni Flow along the Air–Water Interfaces of a Superhydrophobic Surface
The control of liquid motion on the micrometer scale is important for many liquid transport and biomedical applications. An efficient way to trigger liquid motion is by introducing surface tension gradients on free liquid interfaces leading to the Marangoni effect. However, a pronounced Marangoni-dr...
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Published in: | Langmuir 2021-07, Vol.37 (29), p.8677-8686 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The control of liquid motion on the micrometer scale is important for many liquid transport and biomedical applications. An efficient way to trigger liquid motion is by introducing surface tension gradients on free liquid interfaces leading to the Marangoni effect. However, a pronounced Marangoni-driven flow generally only occurs at a liquid–air or liquid–liquid interface but not at solid–liquid interfaces. Using superhydrophobic surfaces, the liquid phase stays in the Cassie state (where liquid is only in contact with the tips of the rough surface structure and air is enclosed in the indentations of the roughness) and hence provides the necessary liquid–air interface to trigger evident Marangoni flows. We use light to asymmetrically heat this interface and thereby control liquid motion near superhydrophobic surfaces. By laser scanning confocal microscopy, we determine the velocity distribution evolving through optical excitation. We show that Marangoni flow can be induced optically at structured, air-entrapping superhydrophobic surfaces. Furthermore, by comparison with numerical modeling, we demonstrate that in addition to the Marangoni flow, buoyancy-driven flow occurs. This effect has so far been neglected in similar approaches and models of thermocapillary driven flow at superhydrophobic surfaces. Our work yields insight into the physics of Marangoni flow and can help in designing new contactless, light-driven liquid transport systems, e.g., for liquid pumping or in microfluidic devices. |
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ISSN: | 0743-7463 1520-5827 |
DOI: | 10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c00539 |