A new, simple, and inexpensive method uses ultraviolet light to control particle motion and assembly within liquids.
The method could improve drug delivery, chemical sensors, and fluid pumps. It encourages particles—from plastic microbeads, to bacterial spores, to pollutants—to gather and organize at a specific location within a liquid and, if researchers want, to move to new locations.
“Many applications related to sensors, drug delivery, and nanotechnology require the precise control of the flow of fluids,” says senior author Ayusman Sen, professor of chemistry at Penn State. “Researchers have developed a number of strategies to do so, including nanomotors and fluid pumps, but prior to this study we did not have an easy way to gather particles at a particular location so that they can perform a useful function and then move them to a new location so they can perform the function again.
Speck stampede
“Say for example you want to build a sensor to detect particles of a pollutant, or bacterial spores in a water sample,” says Sen. “With this new method, we can simply add nanoparticles of gold or titanium dioxide and shine a light to encourage the pollutant particles or spores to gather. By concentrating them in one spot, they become easier to detect. And because light is so easy to manipulate, we have a high degree of control.”
Just as researchers could gather pollutant particles at a particular location, the method could gather silica or polymer beads that carry a payload, like antibodies or drugs, at particular locations within a fluid.
The new method first involves adding a small amount of titanium dioxide or gold nanoparticles to a liquid, like water, that also contains larger particles of interest, like pollutants or beads carrying a payload. Shining a light at a specific point in the liquid heats up the tiny metal nanoparticles, and the heat then transfers to the fluid. The warmer liquid then rises at the point of light—just as warm air rises in a chilly room—and cooler water rushes in to fill the space that the warm water just left, bringing the larger particles with it.
“This causes the larger particles to collect at the point of UV light, where they form closely packed, well-organized structures called colloidal crystals,” says first author Benjamin Tansi, a graduate student in chemistry. “Changing the intensity of the light or the amount of titanium dioxide or gold particles alters how quickly this process occurs.”
When researchers remove the light, the larger particles randomly diffuse through the liquid. But if they relocate the light instead, the larger particles move toward the new point of light, mostly maintaining their structure as they move. This dynamic assembly, disassembly, and movement of organized particles may have important implications for sensing and drug delivery.
“This process is most efficient when gold nanoparticles are used, but we wanted to find an alternative that was less expensive and more accessible,” says Tansi. “We were pleased to find that this method also works with titanium dioxide, an inexpensive and harmless nanoparticle used in cosmetics and as a food additive.”
Creating a flow
In addition to water, the researchers demonstrated the effectiveness of this method in hexadecane, an organic liquid.
“Particles usually don’t assemble very well in salty or non-aqueous environments because everything sticks together,” says Sen. “But here we show that particles can assemble using this method in hexadecane, which suggests we may be able to apply this technique in, for example, biological fluids. To our knowledge this is the first demonstration of light-driven fluid pumping in an organic medium.”
Researchers used mathematical models to describe the dynamics of the system. In addition to describing how particles move in the system, the models confirm that only a minor change in temperature—less than a degree Celsius—from the ultraviolet light is necessary to induce the fluid flow.
The research team is currently testing the limits of this method, for example if particles can move uphill toward the light source or if the method can help sort particles by size.
“We knew that heating gold nanoparticles in suspension could create a fluid flow,” says Tansi, “but prior to this study no one had looked to see if these kinds of thermally-driven fluid flows could be used to do anything useful.
“Because ultraviolet light and titanium dioxide are so easy to control, we think this method could be harnessed in various technologies in the future. For example, a fluid pump that relies on this method could potentially replace the bulky and more expensive traditional pumps that require a power source or that rely on magnetics or mechanical movement to function,” Tansi says.
The paper appears in the journal Angewandte Chemie. Additional researchers Penn State and the University of Pittsburgh contributed to the work. The National Science Foundation funded the research.
Source: Penn State