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1.
Light Sci Appl ; 12(1): 290, 2023 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38052798

ABSTRACT

Reflective displays have stimulated considerable interest because of their friendly readability and low energy consumption. Herein, we develop a reflective display technique via an electro-microfluidic assembly of particles (eMAP) strategy whereby colored particles assemble into annular and planar structures inside a dyed water droplet to create "open" and "closed" states of a display pixel. Water-in-oil droplets are compressed within microwells to form a pixel array. The particles dispersed in droplets are driven by deformation-strengthened dielectrophoretic force to achieve fast and reversible motion and assemble into multiple structures. This eMAP based device can display designed information in three primary colors with ≥170° viewing angle, ~0.14 s switching time, and bistability with an optimized material system. This proposed technique demonstrates the basis of a high-performance and energy-saving reflective display, and the display speed and color quality could be further improved by structure and material optimization; exhibiting a potential reflective display technology.

2.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 652(Pt A): 557-566, 2023 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37607418

ABSTRACT

Controllable construction and manipulation of artificial multi-compartmental structures are crucial in understanding and imitating smart molecular elements such as biological cells and on-demand delivery systems. Here, we report a liquid crystal droplet (LCD) based three-dimensional system for controllable and reversible ingestion and release of guest aqueous droplets (GADs). Induced by interfacial thermodynamic fluctuation and internal topological defect, microscale LCDs with perpendicular anchoring condition at the interface would spontaneously ingest external components from the surroundings and transform them as radially assembled tiny GADs inside LCDs. Landau-de Gennes free-energy model is applied to describe and explain the assembly dynamics and morphologies of these tiny GADs, which presents a good agreement with experimental observations. Furthermore, the release of these ingested GADs can be actively triggered by changing the anchoring conditions at the interface of LCDs. Since those ingestion and release processes are controllable and happen very gently at room temperature and neutral pH environment without extra energy input, these microscale LCDs are very prospective to provide a unique and viable route for constructing hierarchical 3D structures with tunable components and compartments.

3.
Langmuir ; 39(29): 10189-10198, 2023 Jul 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37432677

ABSTRACT

Electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWOD) technology has been considered as a promising candidate for digital microfluidic (DMF) applications due to its outstanding flexibility and integrability. The dielectric layer with a hydrophobic surface is the key element of an EWOD device, determining its driving voltage, reliability, and lifetime. Hereby, inspired by the ionic-liquid-filled structuring polymer with high capacitance independent on thickness, namely ion gel (IG), we develop a polymer (P)-ion gel-amorphous fluoropolymer, namely, PIGAF, composite film as a replaceable hydrophobic dielectric layer for fabrication of a high-efficiency and stable EWOD-DMF device at relatively low voltage. The results show that the proposed EWOD devices using the PIGAF-based dielectric layer can achieve a large contact angle (θ) change of ∼50° and excellent reversibility with a contact angle hysteresis of ≤5° at a relatively low voltage of 30 Vrms. More importantly, the EWOD actuation voltage did not change obviously with the PIGAF film thickness in the range of several to tens of microns, enabling the thickness of the film to be adjusted according to the demand within a certain range while keeping the actuation voltage low. An EWOD-DMF device can be prepared by simply stacking a PIGAF film onto a PCB board, demonstrating stable droplet actuation (motion) at 30 Vrms and 1 kHz as well as a maximum moving velocity of 69 mm/s at 140 Vrms and 1 kHz. The PIGAF film was highly stable and reliable, maintaining excellent EWOD performance after multiple droplet manipulations (≥50 cycles) or long-term storage of 1 year. The proposed EWOD-DMF device has been demonstrated for digital chemical reactions and biomedical sensing applications.

4.
Small ; 19(45): e2302998, 2023 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37449335

ABSTRACT

Droplet array is widely applied in single cell analysis, drug screening, protein crystallization, etc. This work proposes and validates a method for rapid formation of uniform droplet array based on microwell confined droplets electro-coalescence of screen-printed emulsion droplets, namely electro-coalescence droplet array (ECDA). The electro-coalescence of droplets is according to the polarization induced electrostatic and dielectrophoretic forces, and the dielectrowetting effect. The photolithographically fabricated microwells are highly regular and reproducible, ensuring identical volume and physical confinement to achieve uniform droplet array, and meanwhile the microwell isolation protects the paired water droplets from further fusion and broadens its feasibility to different fluidic systems. Under optimized conditions, a droplet array with an average diameter of 85 µm and a throughput of 106 in a 10 cm × 10 cm chip can be achieved within 5 s at 120 Vpp and 50 kHz. This ECDA chip is validated for various microwell geometries and functional materials. The optimized ECDA are successfully applied for digital viable bacteria counting, showing comparable results to the plate culture counting. Such an ECDA chip, as a digitizable and high-throughput platform, presents excellent potential for high-throughput screening, analysis, absolute quantification, etc.

5.
Lab Chip ; 23(12): 2798-2807, 2023 Jun 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37199123

ABSTRACT

Chirality is universal in nature and in biological systems, and the chirality of cholesteric liquid crystals (Ch-LC) is both controllable and quantifiable. Herein, a strategy for precise chirality recognition in a nematic LC host within soft microscale confined droplets is reported. This approach facilitates applications in distance and curvature sensing as well as on-site characterization of the overall uniformity and bending movements of a flexible device. Due to interfacial parallel anchoring, monodisperse Ch-LC spherical microdroplets show radial spherical structure (RSS) rings with a central radical point-defect hedgehog core. Strain-induced droplet deformation destabilizes the RSS configuration and induces the recognition of chirality, creating "core-shell" structures with distinguishable sizes and colors. In practice, an optical sensor is achieved due to the rich palette of optically active structures that can be utilized for gap distance measuring and the monitoring of curvature bending. The properties reported here and the constructed device have great potential for applications in soft robotics, wearable sensors, and advanced optoelectronic devices.

6.
Adv Sci (Weinh) ; 9(32): e2203341, 2022 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36169113

ABSTRACT

Colloidal assembly is a key strategy in nature and artificial device. Hereby, an electromicrofluidic assembly platform (eMAP) is proposed and validated to achieve 3D colloidal assembly and manipulation within water droplets. The water-in-oil emulsion droplets autoposition in the eMAP driven by dielectrophoresis, where the (di)electrowetting effect induces droplet deformation, facilitating quadratic growth of the electric field in water droplet to achieve "far-field" dielectrophoretic colloidal assembly. Reconfigurable 3D colloidal configurations are observed and dynamically programmed via applied electric fields, colloidal properties, and droplet size. Binary and ternary colloidal assemblies in one droplet allow designable chemical and physical anisotropies for functional materials and devices. Integration of eMAP in high throughput enables mass production of functional microcapsules, and programmable optoelectronic units for display devices. This eMAP is a valuable reference for expanding fundamental and practical exploration of colloidal systems.


Subject(s)
Microfluidics , Water , Emulsions/chemistry , Microfluidics/methods , Water/chemistry , Electrowetting , Electricity
7.
Comput Intell Neurosci ; 2022: 4398727, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35837221

ABSTRACT

In real-life scenarios, the accuracy of person re-identification (Re-ID) is subject to the limitation of camera hardware conditions and the change of image resolution caused by factors such as camera focusing errors. People call this problem cross-resolution person Re-ID. In this paper, we improve the recognition accuracy of cross-resolution person Re-ID by enhancing the image enhancement network and feature extraction network. Specifically, we treat cross-resolution person Re-ID as a two-stage task: the first stage is the image enhancement stage, and we propose a Super-Resolution Dual-Stream Feature Fusion sub-network, named SR-DSFF, which contains SR module and DSFF module. The SR-DSFF utilizes the SR module recovers the resolution of the low-resolution (LR) images and then obtains the feature maps of the LR images and super-resolution (SR) images, respectively, through the dual-stream feature fusion with learned weights extracts and fuses feature maps from LR and SR images in the DSFF module. At the end of SR-DSFF, we set a transposed convolution to visualize the feature maps into images. The second stage is the feature acquisition stage. We design a global-local feature extraction network guided by human pose estimation, named FENet-ReID. The FENet-ReID obtains the final features through multistage feature extraction and multiscale feature fusion for the Re-ID task. The two stages complement each other, making the final pedestrian feature representation has the advantage of accurate identification compared with other methods. Experimental results show that our method improves significantly compared with some state-of-the-art methods.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Pedestrians , Humans , Image Enhancement , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods
8.
Anal Chem ; 93(21): 7606-7615, 2021 06 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34003009

ABSTRACT

Prefocusing of cell mixtures through sheath flow is a common technique used for continuous and high-efficiency dielectrophoretic (DEP) cell separation. However, it usually limits the separation flow velocity and requires a complex multichannel fluid control system that hinders the integration of a DEP separator with other microfluidic functionalities for comprehensive biomedical applications. Here, we propose and develop a high-efficiency, sheathless particle/cell separation method without prefocusing based on flow-field-assisted DEP by combining the effects of AC electric field (E-field) and flow field (F-field). A hollow lemon-shaped electrode array is designed to generate a long-range E-field gradient in the microchannel, which can effectively induce lateral displacements of particles/cells in a continuous flow. A series of arc-shaped protrusion structures is designed along the microchannel to form a F-field, which can effectively guide the particles/cells toward the targeted E-field region without prefocusing. By tuning the E-field, two distinct modes can be realized and switched in one single device, including the sheathless separation (ShLS) and the adjustable particle mixing ratio (AMR) modes. In the ShLS mode, we have achieved the continuous separation of breast cancer cells from erythrocytes with a recovery rate of 95.5% and the separation of polystyrene particles from yeast cells with a purity of 97.1% at flow velocities over 2.59 mm/s in a 2 cm channel under optimized conditions. The AMR mode provides a strategy for controlling the mixing ratio of different particles/cells as a well-defined pretreatment method for biomedical research studies. The proposed microchip is easy to use and displays high versatility for biological and medical applications.


Subject(s)
Microfluidic Analytical Techniques , Cell Separation , Electrodes , Electrophoresis , Microfluidics , Physical Phenomena
9.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 12(2)2021 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33562290

ABSTRACT

At present, three-color electrophoretic displays (EPDs) have problems of dim brightness and insufficient color saturation. In this paper, a driving waveform based on a damping oscillation was proposed to optimize the red saturation in three-color EPDs. The optimized driving waveform was composed of an erasing stage, a particles activation stage, a red electrophoretic particles purification stage, and a red display stage. The driving duration was set to 360 ms, 880 ms, 400 ms, and 2400 ms, respectively. The erasing stage was used to erase the current pixel state and refresh to a black state. The particles' activation stage was set as two cycles, and then refreshed to the black state. The red electrophoretic particles' purification stage was a damping oscillation driving waveform. The red and black electrophoretic particles were separated by changing the magnitude and polarity of applied electric filed, so that the red electrophoretic particles were purified. The red display stage was a low positive voltage, and red electrophoretic particles were driven to the common electrode to display a red state. The experimental results showed that the maximum red saturation could reach 0.583, which was increased by 27.57% compared with the traditional driving waveform.

10.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 11(12)2020 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33266119

ABSTRACT

As a laboratory-on-a-chip application tool, digital microfluidics (DMF) technology is widely used in DNA-based applications, clinical diagnosis, chemical synthesis, and other fields. Additional components (such as heaters, centrifuges, mixers, etc.) are required in practical applications on DMF devices. In this paper, a DMF chip interconnection method based on electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWOD) was proposed. An open modified slippery liquid-infused porous surface (SLIPS) membrane was used as the dielectric-hydrophobic layer material, which consisted of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membrane and silicone oil. Indium tin oxide (ITO) glass was used to manufacture the DMF chip. In order to test the relationship between the splicing gap and droplet moving, the effect of the different electrodes on/off time on the minimum driving voltage when the droplet crossed a splicing gap was investigated. Then, the effects of splicing gaps of different widths, splicing heights, and electrode misalignments were investigated, respectively. The experimental results showed that a driving voltage of 119 V was required for a droplet to cross a splicing gap width of 300 µm when the droplet volume was 10 µL and the electrode on/off time was 600 ms. At the same time, the droplet could climb a height difference of 150 µm with 145 V, and 141 V was required when the electrode misalignment was 1000 µm. Finally, the minimum voltage was not obviously changed, when the same volume droplet with different aqueous solutions crossed the splicing gap, and the droplet could cross different chip types. These splicing solutions show high potential for simultaneous detection of multiple components in human body fluids.

11.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(23): 26374-26383, 2020 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32433864

ABSTRACT

Janus particles (JNPs) with controlled anisotropies are regarded as promising materials for sophisticated building blocks and assembly. Herein a straightforward method was proposed for the synthesis of uniformly distributed JNPs with controllable anisotropies, showing two compartmental bulbs with different surface wettability. The synthetic strategy is based on the phase separation-induced styrene liquid protrusion on seed poly(styrene-co-acrylic acid) (CPSAA) nanoparticles via controlled swelling, with the formed polystyrene (PS) and CPSAA compartments corresponding to the amount of monomers. The size (lateral length) ratio of formed PS and CPSAA bulbs, DPS/DCPSAA, defined as "Janusity", has been precisely tuned in the range of 0-0.91 by controlling the mass ratio of two monomers. Obtained JNPs with tunable amphiphilicity are utilized as colloid surfactants to prepare Pickering-emulsions of both water-in-oil (W/O) and oil-in-water (O/W) with proper Janusity. The stability of achieved W/O and O/W Pickering-emulsions is dependent on the adhesion energy of a JNP at the water-oil interfaces. Prepared JNPs have also being utilized to prepare and stabilize monodisperse droplets in microfluidic devices, demonstrating their high potential for fundamental research and practical applications.

12.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 11(5)2020 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32423142

ABSTRACT

Electrophoretic displays (EPDs) have excellent paper-like display features, but their response speed is as long as hundreds of milliseconds. This is particularly important when optimizing the driving waveform for improving the response speed. Hence, a driving waveform design based on the optimization of particle activation was proposed by analyzing the electrophoresis performance of particles in EPD pixels. The particle activation in the driving waveform was divided into two phases: the improving particle activity phase and the uniform reference grayscale phase. First, according to the motion characteristics of particles in improving the particle activity phase, the real-time EPD brightness value can be obtained by an optical testing device. Secondly, the derivative of the EPD brightness curve was used to obtain the inflection point, and the inflection point was used as the duration of improving particle activity phase. Thirdly, the brightness curve of the uniform reference grayscale phase was studied to set the driving duration for obtaining a white reference grayscale. Finally, a set of four-level grayscale driving waveform was designed and validated in a commercial E-ink EPD. The experimental results showed that the proposed driving waveform can cause a reduction by 180 ms in improving particle activity phase and 120 ms in uniform reference grayscale phase effectively, and a unified reference grayscale can be achieved in uniform reference grayscale phase at the same time.

13.
Polymers (Basel) ; 11(3)2019 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30960510

ABSTRACT

P(VDF-TrFE) (vinylidene fluoride-co-trifluoroethylene)/PMMA (PVT/PMMA) blended films synthesized through a facile solution-blending method show outstanding performance for practical electrowetting and energy storage applications. The van der Waals forces and dipolar interactions in neighboring P(VDF-TrFE) and PMMA chains, together with the suppressed free volume (or defect) are critical to the significantly-enhanced electrical properties. Typical, Teflon-covered P(VDF-TrFE)/PMMA blended film exhibits a high dielectric constant of 13 with low dielectric loss (~0.05) at 100 Hz and a large initial contact angle of 122°. Its electrowetting response with a contact angle modulation of 50° in air and low contact angle hysteresis demonstrate that it is promising for low-voltage electrowetting applications. Furthermore, with an energy density of 11.8 J/cm³, approximately double that of pure P(VDF-TrFE), PVT/PMMA blended films containing 20 wt % PMMA turn out to be superior materials for energy storage applications, due to their significantly-enhanced polarization and reduced remnant polarization.

14.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 9(4)2018 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30424077

ABSTRACT

Electrophoretic display is realized by controlling colored nanoparticles moving in micrometer spaces via electrophoresis. The quality of information display is therefore affected by the unsynchronized particle moving speed and the mismatched electric signal according to the crosstalk of the electric field and inhomogeneous material distribution. In this work, we analyzed the mechanism of a fringe phenomenon that affected the information display quality of electrophoretic displays (EPDs). Electrical driving waveforms (voltage signals) are designed to reduce the fringe phenomenon. By using the optimizing driving waveform, we proposed that the fringe phenomenon is quantified as gray value that can be diminished by 25.5, while keeping a response time of 200 ms.

15.
Micromachines (Basel) ; 9(4)2018 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30424093

ABSTRACT

Displays can present information like text, images, or videos in a different color (visible light) by activating the materials in pixels. In a display device, pixels are typically of micrometer size and filled with displaying materials that are aligned and controlled by a display driver integrated circuit. Typical reflective displays can show designed information by manipulating ambient light via the microfluidic behavior in pixels driven by electrophoresis, electrowetting, or electromechanical forces. In this review, we describe the basic working principles and device structures of three reflective displays of electrophoresis display (EPD), electrowetting display (EWD), and interferometric modulator display (IMOD). The optofluidic behavior and controlling factors relating to the display performance are summarized.

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