论文标题
间歇性空气入侵遍及兼容的微通道
Intermittent air invasion in pervaporating compliant microchannels
论文作者
论文摘要
我们探索最初充满水端的微通道中的空气入侵,其中包含收缩。该现象是由通道中存在的液体通过周围介质的渗透驱动的。当气泡逃脱时,渗透是间歇性,生涩的,具有停留动力的特征。我们证明,气泡的停滞和跳跃序列是由于气液体界面和弹性介质之间的弹性毛细血管耦合所致。当界面进入收缩时,其曲率会大大增加,从而导致液体填充通道内的凹陷,从而驱动通道的压缩。由于界面被迫在给定的阈值下留下收缩,这是由于液体含量持续不断渗透而突然释放,这会导致气泡的快速传播,从收缩和恢复通道的休息形状。结合了宏观观测和共聚焦成像,我们提出了对该现象的全面实验研究。特别是,研究了通道几何形状对收缩和跳跃长度停滞时间的影响。我们的新型微流体设计成功地模仿了植物间植物间坑的作用,从而暂时停止长期和严重干旱期间空气栓塞的传播。预计它将作为更复杂的叶状结构进行进一步仿生研究的基础,以恢复实际叶片中报道的间歇性传播的普遍现象。
We explore air invasion in an initially water-filled dead-end compliant microchannel containing a constriction. The phenomenon is driven by the pervaporation of the liquid present in the channel through the surrounding medium. The penetration is intermittent, jerky, and characterised by a stop-and-go dynamics as the bubble escapes the constriction. We demonstrate that this sequence of arrest and jump of the bubble is due to an elastocapillary coupling between the air-liquid interface and the elastic medium. When the interface enters the constriction, its curvature strongly increases, leading to a depression within the liquid-filled channel which drives a compression of the channel. As the interface is forced to leave the constriction at a given threshold, due to the ongoing loss of liquid content by pervaporation, the pressure is suddenly released, which gives rise to a rapid propagation of the air bubbles away from the constriction and a restoration of the rest shape of the channel. Combining macroscopic observations and confocal imaging, we present a comprehensive experimental study of this phenomenon. In particular, the effect of the channel geometry on the time of arrest in the constriction and the jump length is investigated. Our novel microfluidic design succeeds in mimicking the role of inter-vessel pits in plants, which transiently stop the propagation of air embolism during long and severe droughts. It is expected to serve as a building block for further biomimetic studies in more complex leaf-like architectures, in order to recover this universal phenomena of intermittent propagation reported in real leaves.