This study focuses on the development of environmentally friendly Au-CuS/CuInS heteronanotrimers. The chosen strategy relies on the laser photodeposition of a single gold nanodot (ND) onto Janus Cu S/CuInS heteronanocrystals (HNCs). This method offers precise control over the number, location, and size (5 to 8 nm) of the Au NDs by adjusting laser power for the career production, concentration of hole scavenger for charge equilibration in redox reactions, and gold precursor concentration, and exposure time for the final ND size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDomain decay is at the heart of the so-called evaporation-condensation Ostwald-ripening regime of phase ordering kinetics, where the growth of large domains occurs at the expense of smaller ones, which are expected to "evaporate." We experimentally investigate such decay dynamics at the level of a single spherical domain picked from one phase in coexistence and brought into the other phase by an optomechanical approach, in a near-critical phase-separated binary liquid mixture. We observe that the decay dynamics is generally not compatible with the theoretically expected surface-tension decay laws for conserved order parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on numerical simulation of fluid interface deformations induced by either acoustic or optical radiation pressure. This is done by solving simultaneously the scalar wave propagation equation and the two-phase flow equations using the boundary element method. Using dimensional analysis, we show that interface deformation morphogenesis is universal, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe study the spreading of droplets in a near-critical phase-separated liquid mixture, using a combination of experiments, lubrication theory and finite-element numerical simulations. The classical Tanner's law describing the spreading of viscous droplets is robustly verified when the critical temperature is neared. Furthermore, the microscopic cut-off length scale emerging in this law is obtained as a single free parameter for each given temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControlling the deposition of particles is of great importance in many applications. In this work, we study particle deposition driven by Marangoni flows, triggered by laser absorption inside an evaporating droplet. When the laser is turned on, thermal gradients are generated and produce a toroidal Marangoni flow that concentrates the particles around the laser beam and ultimately controls the final deposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLaser-induced thermocapillary deformation of liquid surfaces has emerged as a promising tool to precisely characterize the thermophysical properties of pure fluids. However, challenges arise for nanofluid (NF) and soft bio-fluid systems where the direct interaction of the laser generates an intriguing interplay between heating, momentum, and scattering forces which can even damage soft biofluids. Here, we report a versatile, pump-probe-based, rapid, and non-contact interferometric technique that resolves interface dynamics of complex fluids with the precision of ~1 nm in thick-film and 150 pm in thin-film regimes below the thermal limit without the use of lock-in or modulated beams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetal/semiconductor hetero-nanostructures are now considered as benchmark functional nanomaterials for many light-driven applications. Using laser-driven photodeposition to control growth of gold nanodots (NDs) onto CdSe/CdS dot-in-rods (DRs), we show that the addition of a dedicated hole scavenger (MeOH) is cornerstone to significantly reduce to less than 3.5% the multiple-site nucleation and 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to circumvent the usual nucleation of randomly distributed tiny metallic dots photodeposited on TiO nanoparticles (NPs) induced by conventional UV lamps, we propose to synthesize well-controlled nanoheterodimers (NHDs) using lasers focused inside microfluidic reactors to strongly photoactivate redox reactions of active ions flowing along with nanoparticles in water solution. Since the flux of photons issued from a focused laser may be orders of magnitude higher than that reachable with classical lamps, the production of electron-hole pairs is tremendously increased, ensuring a large availability of carriers for the deposition and favoring the growth of a single metallic dot as compared to secondary nucleation events. We show that the growth of single silver or gold nanodots can be controlled by varying the beam intensity, the concentration of the metallic salt, and the flow velocity inside the microreactor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate the existence of conical interface deformations induced by a laser beam that are similar to Taylor cones in the electrical regime. We show that the cone morphology can be manipulated by fluid and laser parameters. A theory is proposed to quantitatively describe these dependences in good agreement with experimental data obtained for different fluid systems with low interfacial tensions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhen a fluid is heated by the absorption of a continuous laser wave, the fluid density decreases in the heated area. This induces a pressure gradient that generates internal motion of the fluid. Due to mass conservation, convection eddies emerge in the sample.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe principal limitation of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation except relapse remains the transplant-related mortality (TRM). In addition to graft-versus-host disease (GvHD), infections contribute to TRM in many patients. We describe herein a case of an adult patient presenting 5 months after haplo-identical transplantation an isolated fulminant hepatitis due to adenovirus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report experimentally and theoretically on the significant exaltation of optical forces on microparticles when they are partially coated by metallic nanodots and shined with laser light within the surface plasmon resonance. Optical forces on both pure silica particles and silica-gold raspberries are characterized using an optical chromatography setup to measure the variations of the Stokes drag versus laser beam power. Results are compared to the Mie theory prediction for both pure dielectric particles and core-shell ones with a shell described as a continuous dielectric-metal composite of dielectric constant determined from the Maxwell-Garnett approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on two instabilities, called viscous fountain and viscous entrainment, triggered at the interface between two liquids by the action of bulk flows driven by a laser beam. These streaming flows are due to light scattering losses in turbid liquids, and can be directed either toward or forward the interface. We experimentally and numerically investigate these interface instabilities and show that the height and curvature of the interface deformation at the threshold and the jet radius after interface destabilization mainly depend on the waist of the laser beam.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on the first dynamic study of acoustical spring effect in a compliant cavity formed between a spherical ultrasonic transducer immersed in water and the free liquid surface located at its focus. As its optical analog, this effect is due to the mutual feedback between the cavity length L and the large acoustical power stored inside the cavity, here through acoustic radiation pressure. We use surface waves to investigate the acoustical spring effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe unveil the generation of universal morphologies of fluid interfaces by radiation pressure regardless of the nature of the wave, whether acoustic or optical. Experimental observations reveal interface deformations endowed with steplike features that are shown to result from the interplay between the wave propagation and the shape of the interface. The results are supported by numerical simulations and a quantitative interpretation based on the waveguiding properties of the field is provided.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe thinning dynamics of a liquid neck before break-up, as may happen when a drop detaches from a faucet or a capillary, follows different rules and dynamic scaling laws depending on the importance of inertia, viscous stresses, or capillary forces. If now the thinning neck reaches dimensions comparable to the thermally excited interfacial fluctuations, as for nanojet break-up or the fragmentation of thermally annealed nanowires, these fluctuations should play a dominant role according to recent theory and observations. Using near-critical interfaces, we here fully characterize the universal dynamics of this thermal fluctuation-dominated regime and demonstrate that the cross-over from the classical two-fluid pinch-off scenario of a liquid thread to the fluctuation-dominated regime occurs at a well-defined neck radius proportional to the thermal length scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
February 2012
We experimentally investigate the thermocapillary migration induced by local laser heating of the advancing front of a growing droplet confined in a microfluidic channel. When heating implies an effective increase in interfacial tension, the laser behaves as a "soft door" whose stiffness can be tuned via the optical parameters (beam power and waist). The light-driven thermocapillary velocity of a growing droplet, which opposes the basic flow, is characterized for different types of fluid injection, either pressure or flow rate driven, and various channel aspect ratios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe review a strategy for low- and least-order Galerkin models suitable for the design of closed-loop stabilization of wakes. These low-order models are based on a fixed set of dominant coherent structures and tend to be incurably fragile owing to two challenges. Firstly, they miss the important stabilizing effects of interactions with the base flow and stochastic fluctuations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Phys J E Soft Matter
May 2010
Recent experimental developments showed that the use of the radiation pressure, induced by a continuous laser wave, to control fluid-fluid interface deformations at the microscale, represents a very promising alternative to electric or magnetic actuation. In this article, we solve numerically the dynamics and steady state of the fluid interface under the effects of buoyancy, capillarity, optical radiation pressure and viscous stress. A precise quantitative validation is shown by comparison with experimental data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRayleigh-Plateau instability is known to impose a stability limit for the length of a liquid bridge in weightless conditions. This fundamental limit may be exceeded by using a light field to form and stabilize dielectric fluid bridges (A. Casner, J.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on spatiotemporal behavior of self-adapted dielectric liquid columns generated and sustained by light radiation pressure. We show that single- or multivalued liquid column diameter depends on the excitation light beam. When the beam diameter is sufficiently small, we observe a well-defined stationary column diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
June 2008
We study numerically the deformation of sessile dielectric drops immersed in a second fluid when submitted to the optical radiation pressure of a continuous Gaussian laser wave. Both drop stretching and drop squeezing are investigated at steady state where capillary effects balance the optical radiation pressure. A boundary integral method is implemented to solve the axisymmetric Stokes flow in the two fluids.
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