Flow-Programmable and Reversible Surface-Induced LLPS in Nanofluidic Channels

Abstract

Liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) functions as a high-performance reactor strategy in cells, creating dynamic "membrane-less organelles" that selectively concentrate biomolecules. Mimicking this volumetric strategy on a chip offers a route to transcend the capacity and kinetic limits of conventional static surface functionalization; however, engineering applications have been hindered by the stochastic nature of condensate nucleation in bulk mixing. Here, we present "Flow-programmable nanofluidic surface LLPS," a method for deterministically and instantaneously inducing and manipulating surface-mediated LLPS condensates by utilizing the high surface area-to-volume ratio of nanochannels. Unlike random bulk formation, the high surface-to-volume ratio in nanochannels ensures exhaustive molecular recruitment, enabling millisecond-scale equilibration and precise thickness programming governed by diffusion-limited transport physics (δ=Q0.3). Furthermore, the formed condensates exhibit viscous dewetting dynamics, allowing for flow-tunable manipulation including nm-scale thickness control and reversible hydrodynamic peel-off. The unique properties of these surface LLPS reactors hold the potential to overcome limitations of conventional approaches for functional molecule immobilization on 2D surfaces. Examples include the high-capacity accommodation of functional molecules within 3D condensed phases, the dynamic operation of the reactors themselves, and the implementation of complex interactions such as substrate channeling.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
02 Jan 2026
Accepted
23 Mar 2026
First published
03 Apr 2026
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Lab Chip, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Flow-Programmable and Reversible Surface-Induced LLPS in Nanofluidic Channels

R. Ohta, Z. Zhao, X. Yan, R. Wang and K. Mawatari, Lab Chip, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6LC00003G

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