News Release

Surface tension can sort droplets for biomedical applications

Colorado State University scientists describe their most recent innovation in engineered superomniphobic surfaces

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Colorado State University

Droplet Movie

video: Arun Kota's lab at Colorado State University has created a simple and inexpensive device that can sort droplets by their surface tensions. Here they show the ability to catch droplets of varying ethanol concentrations. Sections of the device have been slightly altered by UV light to have different surface chemistries. view more 

Credit: Sanli Movafaghi/Colorado State University

FORT COLLINS, COLO. - Imagine being able to instantly diagnose diabetes, Ebola or some other disease, simply by watching how a droplet of blood moves on a surface.

That's just one potential impact of new research led by Arun Kota, assistant professor in Colorado State University's Department of Mechanical Engineering and the School of Biomedical Engineering. Kota's lab makes coatings that repel not just water, but virtually any liquid, including oils and acids - a property called superomniphobicity.

They described their most recent innovation in engineered superomniphobic surfaces in Lab on a Chip, a publication of the Royal Society of Chemistry. Kota and his team engineered a simple and inexpensive device that can sort droplets of liquid based solely on the liquids' varying surface tensions. They did it by making their device's surface tunable, meaning they can manipulate its surface chemistry to turn up or turn down how well it repels liquids.

The researchers patterned a surface with titanium dioxide "nanoflowers" by decorating a pristine thin film of titanium in a nanoscale pattern that looks like a field of flowers under a scanning electron microscope. Exploiting titanium dioxide's photocatalytic properties, they slightly changed the surface chemistry on various spots on the device by shining UV light on it for set lengths of time.

The result: a flat film that can sort liquid droplets based on their surface tensions, when the device is placed at a slight incline.

This elegantly simple concept could form the basis for a host of applications, from biosensors for point-of-care diagnostic platforms to lab-on-chip systems that can quickly distinguish between droplets of different chemicals, or diseased and non-diseased blood.

Fundamentally, Kota's team is interested in the physics and chemistry of how and why some materials result in superomniphobicity, as well as perfecting the science behind superomniphobic surfaces.

"But we're engineers, so we need applications that can translate commercially," Kota said. "The dream is to create superomniphobic surfaces that are mechanically durable. People can make interesting surfaces, but the problem is that some aren't very durable. If you can make something but it doesn't last, who cares?"

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The paper is called "Tunable Superomniphobic Surfaces for Sorting Droplets by Surface Tension;" its first author is CSU graduate student Sanli Movafaghi, and includes authorship by postdoctoral researcher Wei Wang and John D. Williams, a professor in mechanical engineering at CSU. Movafaghi and Wang worked together in the Kota lab to make the droplet sorting devices.


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