Reprint

Microscale Surface Tension and Its Applications

Edited by
October 2019
240 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03921-564-5 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03921-565-2 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Microscale Surface Tension and Its Applications that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Physical Sciences
Summary

Building on advances in miniaturization and soft matter, surface tension effects are a major key to the development of soft/fluidic microrobotics. Benefiting from scaling laws, surface tension and capillary effects can enable sensing, actuation, adhesion, confinement, compliance, and other structural and functional properties necessary in micro- and nanosystems.

Various applications are under development: microfluidic and lab-on-chip devices, soft gripping and manipulation of particles, colloidal and interfacial assemblies, fluidic/droplet mechatronics. The capillary action is ubiquitous in drops, bubbles and menisci, opening a broad spectrum of technological solutions and scientific investigations. Identified grand challenges to the establishment of fluidic microrobotics include mastering the dynamics of capillary effects, controlling the hysteresis arising from wetting and evaporation, improving the dispensing and handling of tiny droplets, and developing a mechatronic approach for the control and programming of surface tension effects.

In this Special Issue of Micromachines, we invite contributions covering all aspects of microscale engineering relying on surface tension. Particularly, we welcome contributions on fundamentals or applications related to:

    Drop-botics: fluidic or surface tension-based micro/nanorobotics: capillary manipulation, gripping, and actuation, sensing, folding, propulsion and bio-inspired solutions;

    Control of surface tension effects: surface tension gradients, active surfactants, thermocapillarity, electrowetting, elastocapillarity;

    Handling of droplets, bubbles and liquid bridges: dispensing, confinement, displacement, stretching, rupture, evaporation;

    Capillary forces: modelling, measurement, simulation;

    Interfacial engineering: smart liquids, surface treatments;

    Interfacial fluidic and capillary assembly of colloids and devices;

    Biological applications of surface tension, including lab-on-chip and organ-on-chip systems.

We expect novel as well as review contributions on all aspects of surface tension-based micro/nanoengineering. In line with Micromachines' policy, we also invite research proposals that introduce ideas for new applications, devices, or technologies.
Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
mist capillary self-alignment; laser die transfer; hydrophilic/superhydrophobic patterned surfaces; microasssembly; droplet transport; microfluidics; vibrations; contact line oscillation; asymmetric surfaces; anisotropic ratchet conveyor; surface tension; capillary; bearing; wetting; computational fluid dynamics; droplet manipulation; lab-on-a-chip; microfluidics; non-invasive control; photochemical reaction; photoresponsible surfactant; surface tension; two-phase flow; wettability; electrowetting; actuation; capillary pressure; lab-on-a-chip; Nasturtium leaf; smart superhydrophobic surface; hot drop; condensation; microtexture melting; self-lubricating slippery surface; wettability gradient; electrosurgical scalpels; anti-sticking; soft tissue; continuous-flow reactor; mixing; solutal Marangoni effect; relaxation oscillations; super-hydrophobic; durable; adhesion; corrosive resistance; droplet; vibrations; transport; microfluidics; self-cleaning surface; superhydrophobic; superhydrophilic; superomniphobic; microfluidics; electrodynamic screen; gecko setae; micropipette-technique; air-water surface; oil-water interface; soluble surfactant; insoluble lipids; “black lipid films”; “droplet-interface-bilayers”; equilibrium; dynamic; adsorption; gas-microbubbles; oil-microdroplets; lung-surfactants; nanoprecipitation; microfluidics; capillary gripper; pick and place; micromanufacturing; two-photon polymerization; stereolithography; polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) replication; rigid gas permeable contact lenses; wettability; hydrophilic; hydrophobic; 355 nm UV laser; surface treatment; microstructure; contact angle; droplets; liquid bridge; microfabrication; micromanipulation; pick-and-place; soft robotics; surface tension; wetting