Dynamic permeability in metastable droplet interfacial bilayers

Abstract

Membrane pores are implicated in several critical functions, including cell fusion and the transport of signaling molecules for intercellular communication. However, these structural features are often difficult to probe directly. Droplet interfacial bilayers offer a synthetic platform to study such membrane properties. We develop a theory that links size-selective transport across a metastable membrane with its transient structural properties. The central quantity of our theory is a dynamic permeability that depends on the mechanism of pore growth, which controls the transient distribution of pore sizes in the membrane. We present a mechanical perspective to derive pore growth dynamics and the resulting size distribution for growth via Ostwald ripening and discuss how these dynamics compare to other growth mechanisms such as coalescence and growth through surfactant desorption. We find scaling relations between the transported particle size, the pore growth rate, and the time for a given fraction of particles to cross the membrane, from which one may deduce the dominant mechanism of pore growth, as well as material properties and structural features of the membrane. Finally, we suggest experiments using droplet interfacial bilayers to validate our theoretical predictions.

Graphical abstract: Dynamic permeability in metastable droplet interfacial bilayers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Feb 2026
Accepted
30 Apr 2026
First published
19 May 2026

Soft Matter, 2026, Advance Article

Dynamic permeability in metastable droplet interfacial bilayers

N. A. Sarma, D. A. King, X. Wu, B. A. Helms, P. D. Ashby, T. P. Russell and A. K. Omar, Soft Matter, 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D6SM00150E

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