Living tissues dynamically reshape their internal cellular structures through carefully regulated cell-to-cell interactions during morphogenesis. These cellular rearrangement events, such as cell sorting and mutual tissue spreading, have been explained using the differential adhesion hypothesis, which describes the sorting of cells through their adhesive interactions with their neighbors. In this manuscript we explore a simplified form of differential adhesion within a bioinspired lipid-stabilized emulsion approximating cellular tissues. The artificial cellular tissues are created as a collection of aqueous droplets adhered together in a network of lipid membranes. Since this abstraction of the tissue does not retain the ability to locally vary the adhesion of the interfaces through biological mechanisms, instead we employ electrowetting with offsets generated by spatial variations in lipid compositions to capture a simple form of bioelectric control over the tissue characteristics. This is accomplished by first conducting experiments on electrowetting in droplet networks, next creating a model for describing electrowetting in collections of adhered droplets, then validating the model against the experimental measurements. This work demonstrates how the distribution of voltage within a droplet network may be tuned through lipid composition then used to shape directional contraction of the adhered structure using two-dimensional electrowetting events. Predictions from this model were used to explore the governing mechanics for complex electrowetting events in networks, including directional contraction and the formation of new interfaces.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-3190/acc779 | DOI Listing |
This study demonstrates the fabrication and evaluation of a monolithic electrowetting prism with a minimized electrode gap. The electrically tunable prism is capable of two-dimensional beam steering of approximately ±4 degrees under voltage differentials up to ±15 V. The main innovation lies in reducing the electrode gap to 30 μm, accomplished using direct write laser lithography on three dimensional substrates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrowetting on dielectric (EWOD) is used for non-mechanical optical beam steering (OBS) in optical communication systems. High-capacitance ion gel is used to construct an efficient electrowetting interface that facilitates dynamic OBS. This integration facilitates precise control of beam steering and data transmission efficiency in optical wireless communication systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe authors present an erratum to update the Acknowledgements section in their published article, ["Fabrication and characterization of a two-dimensional individually addressable electrowetting microlens array," Opt. Express31, 30550 (2023)10.1364/OE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate a two-dimensional, individually tunable electrowetting microlens array fabricated using standard microfabrication techniques. Each lens in our array has a large range of focal tunability from -1.7 mm to -∞ in the diverging regime, which we verify experimentally from 0 to 75 V for a device coated in Parylene C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinspir Biomim
April 2023
School of Environmental, Civil, Agricultural, and Mechanical Engineering, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, United States of America.
Living tissues dynamically reshape their internal cellular structures through carefully regulated cell-to-cell interactions during morphogenesis. These cellular rearrangement events, such as cell sorting and mutual tissue spreading, have been explained using the differential adhesion hypothesis, which describes the sorting of cells through their adhesive interactions with their neighbors. In this manuscript we explore a simplified form of differential adhesion within a bioinspired lipid-stabilized emulsion approximating cellular tissues.
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