Litcius/Paper detail

The vortex-driven dynamics of droplets within droplets

A. Tiribocchi, A. Montessori, M. Lauricella, F. Bonaccorso, S. Succi, S. Aime, M. Milani, D. A. Weitz

2021Nature Communications50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding the fluid-structure interaction is crucial for an optimal design and manufacturing of soft mesoscale materials. Multi-core emulsions are a class of soft fluids assembled from cluster configurations of deformable oil-water double droplets (cores), often employed as building-blocks for the realisation of devices of interest in bio-technology, such as drug-delivery, tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. Here, we study the physics of multi-core emulsions flowing in microfluidic channels and report numerical evidence of a surprisingly rich variety of driven non-equilibrium states (NES), whose formation is caused by a dipolar fluid vortex triggered by the sheared structure of the flow carrier within the microchannel. The observed dynamic regimes range from long-lived NES at low core-area fraction, characterised by a planetary-like motion of the internal drops, to short-lived ones at high core-area fraction, in which a pre-chaotic motion results from multi-body collisions of inner drops, as combined with self-consistent hydrodynamic interactions. The onset of pre-chaotic behavior is marked by transitions of the cores from one vortex to another, a process that we interpret as manifestations of the system to maximize its entropy by filling voids, as they arise dynamically within the capsule.

Topics & Concepts

VortexMicrofluidicsMechanicsMesoscale meteorologyNanotechnologyDipoleCluster (spacecraft)Dynamics (music)PhysicsChemical physicsFluid dynamicsMaterials scienceFlow (mathematics)Fluid motionTranslational motionRange (aeronautics)VorticityRelative motionSoft materialsClassical mechanicsPattern formationEntropy (arrow of time)Complex fluidInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques InnovationFluid Dynamics and Thin FilmsMicro and Nano Robotics