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Self-Propelled Droplets Function as Programmable Micro-Carriers

By Saarland University | June 7, 2018

In the life sciences, researchers are working to inject drugs or other molecules into a human body using tiny “transport vehicles.” Researchers at Saarland University and the University of Barcelona have shown in a model system that small emulsion droplets can be used as smart carriers. They have developed a method for producing self-propelled liquid droplets capable of providing spatially and temporally controlled delivery of a “molecular load.”

The study was published in Communications Physics ("Spatiotemporal control of cargo delivery performed by programmable self-propelled Janus droplets").

“Using droplets as micro carriers in biomedicine, for example, is a goal that has been pursued already for some time,” says Ralf Seemann, Professor of Experimental Physics at the University of Saarland. However, these droplets could only move passively through the body, for example via the bloodstream. For their current study on active “micro-swimmers,” the physicists from Saarbrücken experimented with a model system that developed from single phase emulsion droplets into so-called Janus droplets: They found that they can actively move and also act as a “smart” carrier for transporting and depositing a cargo.

Janus droplets consist of two different parts: a leading water-rich droplet and a trailing ethanol- and surfactant-rich droplet. The cause of the special abilities of the Janus droplets lies in their formation: they go through a total of three developmental stages, in which different interactions with the environment occur. The researchers were able to use these development steps for “programming” the droplets as active carriers.

“Starting point are homogeneous droplets, which are produced from a water-ethanol mixture. These droplets swim in an oil phase in which a surfactant is dissolved,” explains Jean-Baptiste Fleury, who is a group leader at the department.

Development of a Janus droplet: The fluorescent microscope images show water-ethanol droplets in an oil-surfactant mixture with a fluorescent dye (scale bar 100 µm). Image: Menglin Li, Saarland University

In the first development phase, ethanol exits the droplet and dissolves in the surrounding oil phase. This results in different tensions on the surface of the droplets, which cause the so-called Marangoni flow on the surface as well as in the droplet.

“With the Marangoni effect, liquids migrate from a region of low surface tension to a region of high surface tension,” explains Martin Brinkmann, who is also part of the research team, the physical principle. “During the first stage, the Marangoni flow pushes the particle forward — an active movement caused by the continual loss of ethanol into the oil phase.”

At the same time, surfactants from the oil phase migrate into the drop; because they want to surround themselves preferentially with the ethanol contained therein.

Finally, water and ethanol segregate and small droplets of ethanol-surfactant mixture form in the drop, which quickly merge and, due to the flow within the droplet accumulate at the rear end. At the end of stage two, a characteristic Janus drop has formed.

In the following third stage, the surfactants on the surface of the water-rich drop are still “sucked off” by the rear, ethanol-rich drop, and the surface tension at the rear part of the surface is increased. This gradient causes the liquid on the surface of the front drop to flow into the direction of the higher surface tension and thus sets the entire Janus drop in motion.

“In the course of their formation, the Janus droplets exhibit specific driving mechanisms; moreover, they result in different flow fields in the respective stages,” says Brinkmann.

The researchers from Saarbrücken have precisely explored the motion of these Janus droplets. “We can observe how they move in the experimental cell during their development, which lasts about ten to fifteen minutes, and how they interact differently with obstacles, depending on their evolution stage,” explains Fleury.

The length of the individual stages of development can be controlled by the initial ethanol concentration in the droplet and its size. In order to test their abilities as carriers, the droplets in the experiment were also loaded with DNA molecules as cargo, which accumulate in the ethanol-rich phase.

“Our carrier can selectively walk along obstacles of a specific geometry and surface condition and also deliver its cargo in a targeted manner,” says Seemann, summing up the results of his work group.

Thus, the study describes a first but simple example of a programmable active carrier capable of performing spatially and temporally controlled cargo delivery.

Source: Saarland University

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