Fluid Mixing in Growing Microscale Vesicles Conjugated by Surfactant Nanotubes

Max Davidson, Paul Dommersnes, Martin Markström, Jean-Francois Joanny, Mattias Karlsson, and Owe Orwar*
Contribution from the Department of Physical Chemistry and Microtechnology Centre, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gteborg, Sweden, and Institut Curie, UMR 168, 26 rue d'Ulm, F-75248 Paris Cdex 05, France
J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2005, 127 (4), pp 1251–1257
DOI: 10.1021/ja0451113
Publication Date (Web): January 5, 2005
Copyright © 2005 American Chemical Society

 Chalmers University of Technology.

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 Institut Curie.

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*

In papers with more than one author, the asterisk indicates the name of the author to whom inquiries about the paper should be addressed.

, orwar@phc.chalmers.se

Abstract

Abstract Image

This work addresses novel means for controlled mixing and reaction initiation in biomimetic confined compartments having volume elements in the range of 10-12 to 10-15 L. The method is based on mixing fluids using a two-site injection scheme into growing surfactant vesicles. A solid-state injection needle is inserted into a micrometer-sized vesicle (radius 5−25 μm), and by pulling on the needle, we create a nanoscale surfactant channel connecting injection needle and the vesicle. Injection of a solvent A from the needle into the nanotube results in the formation of a growing daughter vesicle at the tip of the needle in which mixing takes place. The growth of the daughter vesicle requires a flow of surfactants in the nanotube that generates a flow of solvent B inside the nanotube which is counterdirectional to the pressure-injected solvent. The volume ratio ψ between solvent A and B inside the mixing vesicle was analyzed and found to depend only on geometrical quantities. The majority of fluid injected to the growing daughter vesicle comes from the pressure-based injection, and for a micrometer-sized vesicle it dominates. For the formation of one daughter vesicle (conjugated with a 100-nm radius tube) expanded from 1 to 200 μm in radius, the mixing ratios cover almost 3 orders of magnitude. We show that the system can be expanded to linear strings of nanotube-conjugated vesicles that display exponential dilution. Mixing ratios spanning 6 orders of magnitude were obtained in strings of three nanotube-conjugated micrometer-sized daughter vesicles.

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History

  • Published In Issue February 02, 2005
  • Received August 13, 2004

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