Active mixing by self-propelled Janus sponge Marangoni motors with self-maintaining surface tension gradients.

05 June 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Small scale Marangoni motors, which self-generate motion by inducing surface tension gradients on water interfaces through release of surface-active “fuels”, have recently been proposed as self-powered mixing devices for low volume fluids. Such devices could lead to drastic rate improvements in processes reliant on diffusion limited reactions, without reliance on externally powered actuation, allowing for off-grid applications. Such devices however, often show self-limiting lifespans due to the rapid saturation of surface-active agents, resulting in a loss of motion far before depletion of their “fuel”. A potential solution to this is the use surface-active agents which do not persist in their environment. Here we investigate menthyl acetate as a safe, inexpensive and convenient fuel for Marangoni motors. Menthyl acetate is a hydrophobic oil which reacts slowly with water to produce menthol, a high vapor pressure surface active agent. We demonstrate millimeter scale silicone sponge Marangoni motors, loaded with asymmetric “Janus” distributions of menthyl acetate show velocities and rotational speeds up to 30 mm per second and 500 RPM respectively, with their functional lifetimes scaling linearly with fuel volume. We show these devices are capable of enhanced mixing of solutions at orders of magnitude greater rates than diffusion alone.

Keywords

Self-propulsion
Active-matter
Marangoni
Micromixers

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information for Active mixing by self-propelled Janus sponge Marangoni motors with self-maintaining surface tension gradients
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Supporting information for main manuscript including methodology for tracking and analysis of Marangoni motor
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Supplementary movie 1
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Supplementary movie 1 showing Marangoni sponge motor with high spinning rate
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Supplementary movie 2
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Supplementary movie 2 showing the effect of menthyl acetate fuel volume and distribution on Marangoni motor motion.
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Supplementary movie 3
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Supplementary movie 3 Showing a colloidal deposit in water without any menthyl acetate or sponge (No MA).
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Supplementary movie 4
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Supplementary movie 4 Showing a colloidal deposit in water with small volumes of menthyl acetate added to the water surface (MA only).
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Supplementary movie 5
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Supplementary movie 5 Showing a colloidal deposit in water with a menthyl acetate powered spinning Marangoni motor added MA-Sponge.
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