The fast growth of microfluidic applications based on complex fluids is a result of the unique fluid dynamics of these systems, enabling the creation of devices for health care or biological and ...chemical analysis. Microchannels designed to focus, concentrate, or separate particles suspended in viscoelastic liquids are becoming common. The key fluid dynamical issue on which such devices work is viscoelasticity-induced lateral migration. This phenomenon was discovered in the 1960s in macroscopic channels and has received great attention within the microfluidic community in the past decade. This review presents the current understanding, both from experiments and theoretical analysis, of viscoelasticity-driven cross-flow migration. Examples of promising microfluidic applications show the unprecedented capabilities offered by such technology based on geometrically simple microchannels and rheologically complex liquids.
Fickian yet non-Gaussian diffusion (FnGD), a most intriguing open issue in soft matter, is generically associated with some dynamical and/or structural heterogeneity of the environment. Here we ...investigate the features of FnGD in glass-forming liquids, the epitome of dynamical heterogeneity, drawing on experiments on hard-sphere colloidal suspensions and simulations of a simple model of molecular liquid. We demonstrate that FnGD strengthens on approaching the glass transition, by identifying distinct timescales for Fickianity, τ_{F}, and for restoring of Gaussianity, τ_{G}>τ_{F}, as well as their associated length scales, ξ_{F} and ξ_{G}. We find τ_{G}∝τ_{F}^{γ} with γ≃1.8 for both systems. In the deep FnGD regime, the displacement distributions display exponential tails. We show that, in simulations, the time-dependent decay lengths l(t) at different temperatures all collapse onto a power-law master curve l(t)/(ξ_{G})∝(t/τ_{G})^{α}, with α=0.33. A similar collapse, if less sharp, is also found in experiments, seemingly with the same exponent α. We further discuss the connections of the timescales and length scales characterizing FnGD with structural relaxation and dynamic heterogeneity.
A dual-band linear-to-circular planar polarization converter based on a multilayer printed circuit board (PCB) is proposed and demonstrated. Each cell of the periodic surface is formed by six ...substrate layers separated by five foam spacers. The three top layers are identical and contain an 'I'-type strip, while the three layers on the bottom side are realized with three identical Jerusalem crosses (JC). A linearly polarized (LP) wave tilted 45° relative to the
- and
-axis of the converter is used to illuminate the polarizer. In this configuration, right-handed circularly polarized (RHCP) waves are generated at the Ka-band while left-handed circularly polarized (LHCP) waves are generated at the K-band. An equivalent circuit model based on transmission lines is proposed and used to design the polarizer together with full-wave simulations. The simulated/measured axial ratio (AR) remains below 3 dB in the bands 19.4-21.8 GHz (12.5%) and 27.9-30.5 GHz (8.7%) with an insertion loss better than 0.5 dB.
An innovative processing strategy for fabricating soft structures that possess electric‐ and humidity‐driven active/passive actuation capabilities along with touch‐ and humidity‐sensing properties is ...reported. The intrinsically multifunctional material comprises an active thin layer of poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrene sulfonate) in a double‐layered structure with a silicone elastomer and provides an opportunity toward developing a new class of smart structures for soft robotics.
The recently discovered Fickian yet non-Gaussian diffusion (FnGD) is here finely tuned and investigated over a wide range of probabilities and timescales using a quasi-2D suspension of colloidal ...beads under the action of a static and spatially random optical force field. This experimental model allows one to demonstrate that a "rapid" FnGD regime with a diffusivity close to that of free suspension can originate from earlier subdiffusion. We show that these two regimes are strictly tangled: as subdiffusion deepens upon increasing the optical force, deviations from Gaussianity in the FnGD regime become larger and more persistent in time. In addition, the distinctive exponential tails of FnGD are quickly built up in the subdiffusive regime. Our results shed new light on previous experimental observations and suggest that FnGD may generally be a memory effect of earlier subdiffusive processes.
Recent works show that glass-forming liquids display Fickian non-Gaussian Diffusion, with non-Gaussian displacement distributions persisting even at very long times, when linearity in the mean square ...displacement (Fickianity) has already been attained. Such non-Gaussian deviations temporarily exhibit distinctive exponential tails, with a decay length λ growing in time as a power-law. We herein carefully examine data from four different glass-forming systems with isotropic interactions, both in two and three dimensions, namely, three numerical models of molecular liquids and one experimentally investigated colloidal suspension. Drawing on the identification of a proper time range for reliable exponential fits, we find that a scaling law λ(t)∝tα, with α≃1/3, holds for all considered systems, independently from dimensionality. We further show that, for each system, data at different temperatures/concentration can be collapsed onto a master-curve, identifying a characteristic time for the disappearance of exponential tails and the recovery of Gaussianity. We find that such characteristic time is always related through a power-law to the onset time of Fickianity. The present findings suggest that FnGD in glass-formers may be characterized by a "universal" evolution of the distribution tails, independent from system dimensionality, at least for liquids with isotropic potential.
Glass transition is a most intriguing and long-standing open issue in the field of molecular liquids. From a macroscopic perspective, glass-forming systems display a dramatic slowing-down of the ...dynamics, with the inverse diffusion coefficient and the structural relaxation times increasing by orders of magnitude upon even modest supercooling. At the microscopic level, single-molecule motion becomes strongly intermittent, and can be conveniently described in terms of "cage-jump" events. In this work, we investigate a paradigmatic glass-forming liquid, the Kob-Andersen Lennard-Jones model, by means of Molecular Dynamics simulations, and compare the macroscopic and microscopic descriptions of its dynamics on approaching the glass-transition. We find that clear changes in the relations between macroscopic timescales and cage-jump quantities occur at the crossover temperature where Mode Coupling-like description starts failing. In fact, Continuous Time Random Walk and lattice model predictions based on cage-jump statistics are also violated below the crossover temperature, suggesting the onset of a qualitative change in cage-jump motion. Interestingly, we show that a fully microscopic relation linking cage-jump time- and length-scales instead holds throughout the investigated temperature range.
The use of natural or bioinspired materials to develop edible electronic devices is a potentially disruptive technology that can boost point‐of‐care testing. The technology exploits devices that can ...be safely ingested, along with pills or even food, and operated from within the gastrointestinal tract. Ingestible electronics can potentially target a significant number of biomedical applications, both as therapeutic and diagnostic tool, and this technology may also impact the food industry, by providing ingestible or food‐compatible electronic tags that can “smart” track goods and monitor their quality along the distribution chain. Temporary tattoo‐paper is hereby proposed as a simple and versatile platform for the integration of electronics onto food and pharmaceutical capsules. In particular, the fabrication of all‐printed organic field‐effect transistors on untreated commercial tattoo‐paper, and their subsequent transfer and operation on edible substrates with a complex nonplanar geometry is demonstrated.
Temporary tattoo‐paper is proposed as a simple and versatile platform for the integration of biocompatible organic electronics onto food and pharmaceutical capsules. The fabrication of all‐printed biocompatible organic transistors and complementary logic on untreated commercial tattoo‐paper, and their subsequent transfer to and operation on edible substrates is demonstrated, paving the way for novel point‐of‐care devices and smart food labels.
The resistance of plastic textiles to environmental degradation is of major concern as large portions of these materials reach the ocean. There, they persist for undefined amounts of time, possibly ...causing harm and toxicity to marine ecosystems. As a solution to this problem, many compostable and so-called biodegradable materials have been developed. However, to undergo rapid biodegradation, most compostable plastics require specific conditions that are achieved only in industrial settings. Thus, industrially compostable plastics might persist as pollutants under natural conditions. In this work, we tested the biodegradability in marine waters of textiles made of polylactic acid, a diffused industrially compostable plastic. The test was extended also to cellulose-based and conventional non-biodegradable oil-based plastic textiles. The analyses were complemented by bio-reactor tests for an innovative combined approach. Results show that polylactic acid, a so-called biodegradable plastic, does not degrade in the marine environment for over 428 days. This was also observed for the oil-based polypropylene and polyethylene terephthalate, including their portions in cellulose/oil-based plastic blend textiles. In contrast, natural and regenerated cellulose fibers undergo complete biodegradation within approximately 35 days. Our results indicate that polylactic acid resists marine degradation for at least a year, and suggest that oil-based plastic/cellulose blends are a poor solution to mitigate plastic pollution. The results on polylactic acid further stress that compostability does not imply environmental degradation and that appropriate disposal management is crucial also for compostable plastics. Referring to compostable plastics as biodegradable plastics is misleading as it may convey the perception of a material that degrades in the environment. Conclusively, advances in disposable textiles should consider the environmental impact during their full life cycle, and the existence of environmentally degradable disposal should not represent an alibi for perpetuating destructive throw-away behaviors.
Electrically interfacing the skin for monitoring personal health condition is the basis of skin‐contact electrophysiology. In the clinical practice the use of stiff and bulky pregelled or dry ...electrodes, in contrast to the soft body tissues, imposes severe restrictions to user comfort and mobility while limiting clinical applications. Here, in this work dry, unperceivable temporary tattoo electrodes are presented. Customized single or multielectrode arrays are readily fabricated by inkjet printing of conducting polymer onto commercial decal transfer paper, which allows for easy transfer on the user's skin. Conformal adhesion to the skin is provided thanks to their ultralow thickness (<1 µm). Tattoo electrode–skin contact impedance is characterized on short‐ (1 h) and long‐term (48 h) and compared with standard pregelled and dry electrodes. The viability in electrophysiology is validated by surface electromyography and electrocardiography recordings on various locations on limbs and face. A novel concept of tattoo as perforable skin‐contact electrode, through which hairs can grow, is demonstrated, thus permitting to envision very long‐term recordings on areas with high hair density. The proposed materials and patterning strategy make this technology amenable for large‐scale production of low‐cost sensing devices.
Temporary tattoo electrodes are fabricated by inkjet printing and tested as unperceivable skin‐contact electrodes in various electrophysiology applications. Ultralow thickness (<1 µm) endows tattoos with conformable adhesion to skin and capability to be perforated by growing hairs. Custom multielectrodes arrays can be designed in view of specific applications in diagnostics, human machine interfacing, and personal health monitoring.