Paper
25 August 2017 Flow through oil nanothreads
Colin D. Bain, Alex Hargreaves, Joshua Bull, Buddhapriya Chakrabarti
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Abstract
Emulsion droplets with ultralow interfacial tensions can be pulled apart by a pair of optical traps into daughter droplets that remain connected by an oil thread of nanoscopic thickness. This thread is stabilized by the bending modulus of the oil-water interface, which opposes the necking that leads to break up into droplets in the Rayleigh-Plateau instability. Variation in the pressure exerted on the droplets by the optical traps leads to a flow of liquid between the droplets via the nanothread. The flow has two components: (i) Poiseuille flow within the thread, and (ii) transport of the entire thread from one droplet to the other, with interface being created on one droplet and destroyed on the other. For typical viscosities of the oil and water, the dominant contribution to flow arises from the transport of the whole thread with the flow internal to the thread making a minor contribution.
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Colin D. Bain, Alex Hargreaves, Joshua Bull, and Buddhapriya Chakrabarti "Flow through oil nanothreads", Proc. SPIE 10347, Optical Trapping and Optical Micromanipulation XIV, 103471V (25 August 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2276990
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KEYWORDS
Interfaces

Optical tweezers

Liquids

Capillaries

Roads

Human-machine interfaces

Microscopy

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