| Literature DB >> 27309129 |
Shi-Yang Tang1, Bugra Ayan1, Nitesh Nama1, Yusheng Bian1, James P Lata1, Xiasheng Guo1,2, Tony Jun Huang1.
Abstract
Micro- to nanosized droplets of liquid metals, such as eutectic gallium indium (EGaIn) and Galinstan, have been used for developing a variety of applications in flexible electronics, sensors, catalysts, and drug delivery systems. Currently used methods for producing micro- to nanosized droplets of such liquid metals possess one or several drawbacks, including the lack in ability to control the size of the produced droplets, mass produce droplets, produce smaller droplet sizes, and miniaturize the system. Here, a novel method is introduced using acoustic wave-induced forces for on-chip production of EGaIn liquid-metal microdroplets with controllable size. The size distribution of liquid metal microdroplets is tuned by controlling the interfacial tension of the metal using either electrochemistry or electrocapillarity in the acoustic field. The developed platform is then used for heavy metal ion detection utilizing the produced liquid metal microdroplets as the working electrode. It is also demonstrated that a significant enhancement of the sensing performance is achieved by introducing acoustic streaming during the electrochemical experiments. The demonstrated technique can be used for developing liquid-metal-based systems for a wide range of applications.Entities:
Keywords: EGaIn; acoustics; electrochemistry; heavy metal ion sensing; liquid metal; microdroplets
Year: 2016 PMID: 27309129 PMCID: PMC6311111 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201600737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281