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1.
Small Methods ; : e2400226, 2024 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39091063

ABSTRACT

Separation of equally sized particles distinguished solely by material properties remains still a very challenging task. Here a simple separation of differently charged, thermo-responsive polymeric particles (for example microgels) but equal in size, via the combination of pressure-driven microfluidic flow and precise temperature control is proposed. The separation principle relies on forcing thermo-responsive microgels to undergo the volume phase transition during heating and therefore changing its size and correspondingly the change in drift along a pressure driven shear flow. Different thermo-responsive particle types such as different grades of ionizable groups inside the polymer matrix have different temperature regions of volume phase transition temperature (VPTT). This enables selective control of collapsed versus swollen microgels, and accordingly, this physical principle provides a simple method for fractioning a binary mixture with at least one thermo-responsive particle, which is achieved by elution times in the sense of particle chromatography. The concepts are visualized in experimental studies, with an intend to improve the purification strategy of the broad distribution of charged microgels into fractioning to more narrow distribution microgels distinguished solely by slight differences in net charge.

2.
Small ; : e2403546, 2024 Jul 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38967188

ABSTRACT

In this article, a novel strategy is presented to selectively separate a mixture of equally sized microparticles but differences in material composition and surface properties. The principle relies on a photosensitive surfactant, which makes particles under light illumination phoretically active. The latter hovers microparticles from a planar interface and together with a superimposed fluid flow, particles experience a drift motion characteristic to its interfacial properties. The drift motion is investigated as a function of applied wavelength, demonstrating that particles composed of different material show a unique spectrally resolved light-induced motion profile. Differences in those motion profile allow a selective fractioning of a desired particle from a complex particle mixture made out of more than two equally sized different particle types. Besides that, the influence of applied wavelength is systematically studied, and discussed the origin of the spectrally resolved chemical activity of microparticles from measured photo-isomerization rates.

3.
Small ; 20(33): e2401144, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38552250

ABSTRACT

On-demand switch on/off blood clogging is of paramount importance for the survival of mammals, for example as a quick response to seal damage wounds to minimize their bleeding rate. This mechanism is a complex chain process from initiated red blood cell aggregation at the target location (open wound) that quickly seals on a macroscopic scale the damaged flash. Inspired by nature an on-demand switchable particle clogging mechanism is developed with high spatial resolution down to micrometer size using light as an external non-invasive stimulation. Particle clogging can be adjusted on demand strong enough to even withstand pressure-driven fluid flow, additionally building up walls of aggregated particles, which stop the momentum of big particles under shear. The principle relies on a photosensitive surfactant, which induces under light illumination a long-ranged lateral attractive phoretic-osmotic activity of silica microparticles forcing them to aggregate. The strength of aggregation and therefore motion reduction or even stop of the particles against the fluid flow depends on the ratio between the aggregation strength and the velocity of the particles. The aggregation strength can be precisely controlled by the applied light intensity and adjusted particle concentration. Increasing both parameters results in a stronger aggregation tendency.

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