Mosaic Patterned Surfaces toward Generating Hardly‐Volatile Capsular Droplet Arrays for High‐Precision Droplet‐Based Storage and Detection

Precise detection involving droplets based on functional surfaces is promising for the parallelization and miniaturization of platforms and is significant in epidemic investigation, analyte recognition, environmental simulation, combinatorial chemistry, etc. However, a challenging and considerable t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) Germany), 2023-04, Vol.19 (14), p.e2206274-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Jiao, Long, Wu, Yixiao, Hu, Yanjun, Guo, Qianqian, Wu, Huaping, Yu, Huiyao, Deng, Longqiang, Li, Dongliang, Li, Lin
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container_issue 14
container_start_page e2206274
container_title Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany)
container_volume 19
creator Jiao, Long
Wu, Yixiao
Hu, Yanjun
Guo, Qianqian
Wu, Huaping
Yu, Huiyao
Deng, Longqiang
Li, Dongliang
Li, Lin
description Precise detection involving droplets based on functional surfaces is promising for the parallelization and miniaturization of platforms and is significant in epidemic investigation, analyte recognition, environmental simulation, combinatorial chemistry, etc. However, a challenging and considerable task is obtaining mutually independent droplet arrays without cross‐contamination and simultaneously avoiding droplet evaporation‐caused quick reagent loss, inaccuracy, and failure. Herein, a strategy to generate mutually independent and hardly‐volatile capsular droplet arrays using innovative mosaic patterned surfaces is developed. The evaporation suppression of the capsular droplet arrays is 1712 times higher than the naked droplet. The high evaporation suppression of the capsular droplet arrays on the surfaces is attributed to synergistic blocking of the upper oil and bottom mosaic gasproof layer. The scale‐up of the capsular droplet arrays, the flexibility in shape, size, component (including aqueous, colloidal, acid, and alkali solutions), liquid volume, and the high‐precision hazardous substance testing proves the concept's high compatibility and practicability. The mutually independent capsular droplet arrays with amazingly high evaporation suppression are essential for the new generation of high‐performance open‐surface microfluidic chips used in COVID‐19 diagnosis and investigation, primary screening, in vitro enzyme reactions, environmental monitoring, nanomaterial synthesis, etc. A new strategy using a mosaic triple‐patterned surface that provided mutually independent oil droplets and superamphiphilic gasproof elements to get hardly‐volatile capsular droplet arrays is proposed. The mosaic & patterned surface and the mutually independent and hardly‐volatile capsular droplet arrays enlighten the design ideas of more integrated and efficient functional surfaces and a new generation of open‐surface microfluidics.
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Herein, a strategy to generate mutually independent and hardly‐volatile capsular droplet arrays using innovative mosaic patterned surfaces is developed. The evaporation suppression of the capsular droplet arrays is 1712 times higher than the naked droplet. The high evaporation suppression of the capsular droplet arrays on the surfaces is attributed to synergistic blocking of the upper oil and bottom mosaic gasproof layer. The scale‐up of the capsular droplet arrays, the flexibility in shape, size, component (including aqueous, colloidal, acid, and alkali solutions), liquid volume, and the high‐precision hazardous substance testing proves the concept's high compatibility and practicability. The mutually independent capsular droplet arrays with amazingly high evaporation suppression are essential for the new generation of high‐performance open‐surface microfluidic chips used in COVID‐19 diagnosis and investigation, primary screening, in vitro enzyme reactions, environmental monitoring, nanomaterial synthesis, etc. A new strategy using a mosaic triple‐patterned surface that provided mutually independent oil droplets and superamphiphilic gasproof elements to get hardly‐volatile capsular droplet arrays is proposed. 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subjects Arrays
Chemical synthesis
Combinatorial analysis
Combinatorial chemistry
Droplets
Environmental monitoring
evaporation suppression
Hazardous materials
high compatibility
microfluidic chips
mosaic patterned surfaces
Mosaics
Nanomaterials
Nanotechnology
Reagents
title Mosaic Patterned Surfaces toward Generating Hardly‐Volatile Capsular Droplet Arrays for High‐Precision Droplet‐Based Storage and Detection
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