Mosquito compound eyes are elaborate multifunctional hierarchical structures. The presence of ordered curved features spanning length scales of nanometers to millimeters provides the mosquito eye with a wide field of view, an infinite depth of field, and antifogging properties. Developing bio-inspired compound lenses is challenging because of the need to mimic all characteristic curvatures along with their functionalities. Herein, we show how the curvature inherent to nanoparticles, emulsion droplets, and liquid marbles can be employed to mimic the hierarchical structure and functionality of mosquito compound eyes. At the nanometer to micrometer length scale we employ nanoparticle-stabilized emulsion droplets of photocurable oil to form microlenses with nanoscale surface features. After polymerization, the microlenses form a monolayer on an oil droplet to create an optically clear, millimeter scale, liquid marble that functions as a compound lens. We characterize the optical and surface properties of the compound lenses and find that they reproduce the functionality of the mosquito eye. Additionally, we exploit the mobility and reconfigurability of liquid marbles to create arrays (centimeter scale) of compound lenses and other types of functional lenses such as the Janus lens that magnifies the image acquired by the compound lens. Simple and scalable methods to create compound lenses could aid in the development of miniaturized advanced vision systems.
We report a two-phase adhesive fluid recovered from pollen, which displays remarkable rate tunability and humidity stabilization at microscopic and macroscopic scales. These natural materials provide a previously-unknown model for bioinspired humidity-stable and dynamically-tunable adhesive materials. In particular, two immiscible liquid phases are identified in bioadhesive fluid extracted from dandelion pollen taken from honey bees: a sugary adhesive aqueous phase similar to bee nectar and an oily phase consistent with plant pollenkitt. Here we show that the aqueous phase exhibits a rate-dependent capillary adhesion attributed to hydrodynamic forces above a critical separation rate. However, the performance of this adhesive phase alone is very sensitive to humidity due to water loss or uptake. Interestingly, the oily phase contributes scarcely to the wet adhesion. Rather, it spreads over the aqueous phase and functions as a barrier to water vapor that tempers the effects of humidity changes and stabilizes the capillary adhesion.
Nature provides remarkable examples of mass-produced microscale particles with structures and chemistries optimized by evolution for particular functions. Synthetic chemical tailoring of such sustainable biogenic particles may be used to generate new multifunctional materials. Herein, we report a facile method for the development of bioenabled core/shell microparticles consisting of surface-modified ragweed pollen with a magnetic core, for which both multimodal adhesion and optical reflectivity can be tailored. Adhesion of the magnetic-core pollen can be tuned, relative to native pollen, through the combination of tailorable short-range interactions (over ∼5 nm, via van der Waals forces and hydrogen bonding), an intermediate-range (over several μm) capillary force, and long-range (over ∼1 mm) magnetic attraction. The magnetic force could be controlled by the amount of iron oxide loaded within the core of the pollen particle, while the short-range interactions and capillary force can be tuned by coating with polystyrene nanoparticles and/or a layer of viscous pollenkitt on the exine shell surface. Such coatings were also used to tailor the optical reflectance of the magnetic pollen particles; that is, the light-reflectance intensity was enhanced by coating with pollenkitt and significantly reduced by coating with polystyrene nanoparticles. This approach for generating multifunctional core/shell microparticles with tailorable adhesion and optical reflectivity may be extended to other pollen or biological particles or to synthetic biomimetic particles. Such independent control of the core and shell chemistries enabled by this approach also allows for the generation of microparticles with a variety of combination in functions tailorable to other properties.
Using molecular dynamics simulations, we investigate the fate of a nanoparticle deposited on a solid surface as a liquid-liquid interface moves past it, depending on the wetting of the solid by the two liquids and the magnitude of the driving force. Interfacial pinning is observed below a critical value of the driving force. Above the critical driving force for pinning and for large contact angle value we observe stick-slip motion, with intermittent interfacial pinning and particle sliding at the interface. At low contact angles we observe that particle rolling precedes detachment, which indicates the importance of dynamic effects not present in static models. The findings in this work indicate that particle mobilization and removal efficiencies originating in dynamic liquid-liquid interfaces can be significantly underestimated by static models.
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