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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2023 Nov 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37934048

RESUMO

Intentional generation, amplification, and discharging of chemical gradients is central to many nano- and micromanipulative technologies. We describe a straightforward strategy to direct chemical gradients inside a solution via local photoelectric surface charging of organic semiconducting thin films. We observed that the irradiation of carbon nitride thin films with ultraviolet light generates local and sustained surface charges in illuminated regions, inducing chemical gradients in adjacent solutions via charge-selective immobilization of surfactants onto the substrate. We studied these gradients using droplet force gradient sensors, complex emulsions with simultaneous and independent responsive modalities to transduce information on transient gradients in temperature, chemistry, and concentration via tilting, morphological reconfiguration, and chemotaxis. Fine control over the interaction between local, photoelectrically patterned, semiconducting carbon nitride thin films and their environment yields a new method to design chemomechanically responsive materials, potentially applicable to micromanipulative technologies including microfluidics, lab-on-a-chip devices, soft robotics, biochemical assays, and the sorting of colloids and cells.

2.
Chemistry ; 29(18): e202203790, 2023 Mar 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36661211

RESUMO

We report a novel stimuli-responsive fluorescent material platform that relies on an evocation of aggregation-induced emission (AIE) from tetraphenylethylene (TPE)-based surfactants localized at one hemisphere of biphasic micro-scale Janus emulsion droplets. Dynamic alterations in the available interfacial area were evoked through surfactant-induced dynamic changes of the internal droplet morphology that can be modulated as a function of the balance of interfacial tensions of the droplet constituent phases. Thus, by analogy with a Langmuir-Blodgett trough that enables selective concentration of surfactants at a liquid-gas interface, we demonstrate here a method for controllable modulation of the available interfacial area of surfactant-functionalized liquid-liquid interfaces. We show that a morphology-dependent alteration of the interfacial area can be used to evoke an optical signal, by selectively assembling synthesized TPE-based surfactants on the respective droplet interfaces. A trigger-induced increase in the concentration of TPE-based surfactants at the liquid-liquid interfaces results in an evocation of aggregation-induced emission (AIE), inducing an up to 3.9-fold increase in the measured emission intensity of the droplets.

3.
Soft Matter ; 19(39): 7541-7549, 2023 Oct 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37750330

RESUMO

The formation of macromolecularly enriched condensates through associative or segregative liquid-liquid phase separation phenomena is known to play a central role in controlling various cellular functions in nature. The potential to spatially and temporally modulate multistep chemical reactions and pathways has inspired the use of phase-separated systems for the development of various synthetic colloidal micro- and nanoreactor systems. Here, we report a rational and synthetically minimal design strategy to emulate intended spatiotemporal functions in morphologically intricate and structurally defined calcium alginate hydrogel microreactors possessing multicompartmentalized internal architectures. Specifically, we implement a thermal phase separation protocol to achieve fine-control over liquid-liquid phase separation inside complex aqueous emulsion droplet templates that are loaded with hydrophilic polymer mixtures. Subsequent gelation of alginate-containing droplet templates using a novel freeze-thaw approach that can be applied to both scalable batch production or more precise microfluidic methods yields particle replicas, in which subcompartmentalized architectures can be retained. Larger active components can be enriched in the internal compartments due to their preferential solubility, and we show that selective sequestration of enzymes serves to create desired microenvironments to control and tune the reaction kinetics of a multistep enzyme cascade by reducing their mutual interference. This demonstration of mitigating substrate inhibition that is based primarily on optimizing the multicompartmentalized hydrogel particle morphology offers new opportunities for the simple and synthetically-minimal batch generation of hydrogel-based synthesis microreactors.


Assuntos
Alginatos , Polímeros , Hidrogéis , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Celulares
4.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 42(8): e2000433, 2021 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33103292

RESUMO

Aqueous multiphase systems have attracted a lot of interest recently espeically due to target applications in the biomedical field, cosmetics, and food. In turn, water-in-water Pickering emulsions are investigated frequently. In here, graphitic carbon nitride (g-CN) stabilized water-in-water Pickering emulsions are fabricated via the dextran and poly(ethylene glycol)-based aqueous two-phase system. Five different derivatives of g-CN as the Pickering stabilizer are described and the effect of g-CN concentration on droplet sizes is investigated. Stable emulsions (up to 16 weeks) are obtained that can be broken on purpose via various approaches, including dilution, surfactant addition, and most notably light irradiation. The novel approach of water-in-water emulsion stabilization via g-CN opens up considerable advances in aqueous multiphase systems and may also introduce photocatalytic properties.


Assuntos
Grafite , Água , Emulsões , Compostos de Nitrogênio , Tensoativos
5.
Soft Matter ; 16(46): 10419-10424, 2020 Dec 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33155583

RESUMO

Characterization of surfactant effectiveness and thus an evaluation of their performance in a wide range of emulsion technologies requires a precise determination of key parameters including their critical micelle concentrations as well as their ability to lower the surface tension at interfaces. In this study, we describe a new approach to quantify marginal variations in interfacial tension of surfactant stabilized fluid interfaces. The method is based on a unique chemical-morphological coupling inside bi-phasic oil-in-water Janus emulsions that undergo dynamic morphological transitions in response to changes in the surfactant type, concentration, ratio, and configuration. Variations in Janus droplet morphologies are readily monitored in situ using a simple side-view imaging setup, resulting in a fast, convenient, cost-effective, time-, and sample-saving technique for the characterization of classical surfactant systems. In addition, the reported method facilitates monitoring of triggered changes in surfactant effectiveness, e.g. invoked by external triggers, and thus proves particularly useful for the in situ analysis of stimuli-responsive surfactants and emulsions.

6.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 2562, 2022 05 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35538083

RESUMO

We report, for the first time, a chemotactic motion of emulsion droplets that can be controllably and reversibly altered. Our approach is based on using biphasic Janus emulsion droplets, where each phase responds differently to chemically induced interfacial tension gradients. By permanently breaking the symmetry of the droplets' geometry and composition, externally evoked gradients in surfactant concentration or effectiveness induce anisotropic Marangoni-type fluid flows adjacent to each of the two different exposed interfaces. Regulation of the competitive fluid convections then enables a controllable alteration of the speed and the direction of the droplets' chemotactic motion. Our findings provide insight into how compositional anisotropy can affect the chemotactic behavior of purely liquid-based microswimmers. This has implications for the design of smart and adaptive soft microrobots that can autonomously regulate their response to changes in their chemical environment by chemotactically moving towards or away from a certain target, such as a bacterium.


Assuntos
Tensoativos , Anisotropia , Emulsões , Movimento (Física) , Tensão Superficial , Tensoativos/química
7.
Macromolecules ; 54(2): 981-987, 2021 Jan 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33518808

RESUMO

A facile one-step approach for the synthesis of physically and chemically anisotropic polymer particles with tunable size, shape, composition, wettability, and functionality is reported. Specifically, dynamically reconfigurable oil-in-water Janus emulsions containing photocurable hydrocarbon or fluorocarbon acrylate monomers as one of the droplet phases are used as structural templates to polymerize them into precision Janus particles with highly uniform anomalous morphologies including (hemi-) spheres, lenses, and bowls. During polymerization, each interface is exposed to a different chemical environment, yielding particles with an intrinsic Janus character that can be amplified via side-selective postfunctionalization. The fabrication method allows to start with various common emulsification techniques, thus generating particles in the range of 200 nm -150 µm, also at a technical scale. The anisotropic shape combined with the asymmetric wettability profile of the produced particles promotes their directed self-assembly into colloidal clusters as well as their directional alignment at fluid interfaces. We foresee the application of such Janus particles in technical emulsions or oil recovery, for the manufacturing of programmed self-assembled architectures, and for the engineering of microstructured interfaces.

8.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(27): 32510-32519, 2021 Jul 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34185504

RESUMO

Janus particles exhibit a strong tendency to directionally assemble and segregate to interfaces and thus offer advantages as colloidal analogues of molecular surfactants to improve the stability of multiphasic mixtures. Investigation and application of the unique adsorption properties require synthetic procedures that enable careful design and reliable control over the particles' asymmetric chemistry and wettability profiles with high morphological uniformity across a sample. Herein, we report on a novel one-step synthetic approach for the generation of amphiphilic polymer Janus particles with highly uniform and tunable wettability contrasts, which is based on using reconfigurable bi-phasic Janus emulsions as versatile particle scaffolds. Two phase-separated acrylate oils were used as the constituent droplet phases and transformed into their solidified Janus particle replicas via UV-induced radical polymerization. Using Janus emulsions as particle precursors offers the advantage that their internal droplet geometry can be fine-tuned by changing the force balance of surface tensions acting at the individual interfaces via surfactants or the volume ratio of the constituent phases. In addition, preassembled functional surfactants at the droplet interfaces can be locked in position upon polymerization, which enables both access toward postfunctionalization reaction schemes and the generation of highly uniform Janus particles with adjustable wettability profiles. Depending on the particle morphology and wettability, their interfacial position can be adjusted, which allows us to stabilize either air bubbles-in-water or water droplets-in-air (liquid marbles). Motivated by the interfacial activity of the particles and particularly the longevity of the resulting particle-stabilized air-in-water bubbles, we explored their ability to promote the delivery of oxygen inside a liquid-phase reaction medium, namely, for the heterogeneous Au-NP-mediated catalytic oxidation of d-glucose. We observed a 2.2-fold increase in the reaction rate attributed to the increase of the local concentration of oxygen around catalysts, thus showcasing a new strategy to overcome the limited solubility of gases in aqueous reaction media.

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