Light-Driven Transport of a Liquid Marble with and against Surface Flows

13 September 2016

Liquid marbles, that is, liquid drops coated by a hydrophobic powder, do not wet any solid or liquid substrate, making their transport and manipulation both highly desirable and challenging. Herein, we describe the light-driven transport of floating liquid marbles and emphasize a surprising motion behavior. Liquid marbles are deposited on a water solution containing photosensitive surfactants. Irradiation of the solution generates photoreversible Marangoni flows that transport the liquid marbles toward UV light and away from blue light when the thickness of the liquid substrate is large enough (Marangoni regime). Below a critical thickness, the liquid marbles move in the opposite direction to that of the surface flow at a speed increasing with decreasing liquid thickness (anti-Marangoni). We demonstrate that the anti-Marangoni motion is driven by the free surface deformation, which propels the non-wetting marble against the surface flow. We call this behavior “slide effect”.

 

 

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References:
Light-Driven Transport of a Liquid Marble with and against Surface Flows
Nikita Kavokine, Dr. Manos Anyfantakis, Dr. Mathieu Morel, Dr. Sergii Rudiuk, Dr. Thomas Bickel and Prof. Dr. Damien Baigl
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2016, 55, 11183 –11187
doi: 10.1002/anie.201603639

Light-Driven Transport of a Liquid Marble with and against Surface Flows