Issue 4, 2012

Osmotic traps for colloids and macromolecules based on logarithmic sensing in salt taxis

Abstract

Diffusiophoretic motion of colloids and macromolecules under salt gradients exhibits a logarithmic-sensing, i.e. the particle velocity is proportional to the spatial gradient of the logarithm of the salt concentration, as VDP = DDP∇logc. Here we explore experimentally the implications of this log-sensing behavior, on the basis of a hydrogel microfluidic device allowing to build spatially and temporally controlled gradients. We first demonstrate that the non-linearity of the salt-taxis leads to a trapping of particles under concentration gradient oscillations via a rectification of the motion. As an alternative, we make use of the high sensitivity of diffusiophoretic migration to vanishing salt concentration due to the log-sensing: in a counter-intuitive way, a vanishing gradient can lead to measurable velocity provided that the solute concentration is low enough, thus keeping ∇c/c finite. We show that this leads to a strong segregation of particles in osmotic shock configuration, resulting from a step change of the salt concentration at the boundaries. These various phenomena are rationalized on the basis of a theoretical description for the time-dependent Smoluchowski equation for the colloidal density.

Graphical abstract: Osmotic traps for colloids and macromolecules based on logarithmic sensing in salt taxis

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
21 Jul 2011
Accepted
23 Sep 2011
First published
16 Nov 2011

Soft Matter, 2012,8, 980-994

Osmotic traps for colloids and macromolecules based on logarithmic sensing in salt taxis

J. Palacci, C. Cottin-Bizonne, C. Ybert and L. Bocquet, Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 980 DOI: 10.1039/C1SM06395B

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