“…Many areas employ multiphase droplet-based microfludics (Shui et al 2007;Gunther and Jensen 2006), including inkjet printers (van Dam and Le Clerc 2004), systems for separation of biochemical samples (Fujimura et al 2003), manipulation of biomolecules (Lo et al 2004), bio-sensing (Wang et al 2006), single cell analysis (Yong et al 2010), enhanced mixing for bio-sample reactions (Yang et al 2006), biomolecular detection (Tseng et al 2004), drug delivery devices (Chung et al 2008), dairy analysis (Skurtys and Aguilera 2008), microelectronic cooling (Nilson et al 2006), explosives detection (Piorek et al 2007), bubble computing (Prakash and Gershenfeld 2007), interfacial tension measurement (Xu et al 2008), and analysis of emulsions, foams, and bubble coalescence (Kralj et al 2005). As general characteristics, the droplets should be as stable, monodisperse, reproducible, and controllable as possible.…”