Multiscale vapor-mediated dendritic pattern formation and bacterial aggregation in complex respiratory biofluid droplets

Hegde, Omkar ; Chatterjee, Ritika ; Rasheed, Abdur ; Chakravortty, Dipshikha ; Basu, Saptarshi (2022) Multiscale vapor-mediated dendritic pattern formation and bacterial aggregation in complex respiratory biofluid droplets Journal of Colloid and Interface Science, 606 . pp. 2011-2023. ISSN 00219797

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2021.09.158

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2021.09.158

Abstract

Hypothesis Deposits of biofluid droplets on surfaces (such as respiratory droplets formed during an expiratory) are composed of water-based salt-protein solution that may also contain an infection (bacterial/viral). The final patterns of the deposit formed and bacterial aggregation on the deposits are dictated by the fluid composition and flow dynamics within the droplet. Experiments This work reports the spatio-temporal, topological regulation of deposits of respiratory fluid droplets and control of bacterial aggregation by tweaking flow inside droplets using non-contact vapor-mediated interactions. Desiccated respiratory droplets form deposits with haphazard multiscale dendritic, cruciform-shaped precipitates when evaporated on a glass substrate. However, we showcase that short and long-range vapor-mediated interaction between the droplets can be used as a tool to control these deposits at nano-micro-millimeter scales. We morphologically control hierarchial dendrite size, orientation and subsequently suppress cruciform-shaped crystals by placing a droplet of ethanol in the vicinity of the biofluid droplet. Active living matter in respiratory fluids like bacteria is preferentially segregated and agglomerated without its viability and pathogenesis attenuation. Findings The nucleation sites can be controlled via preferential transfer of solutes in the droplets; thus, achieving control over crystal occurrence, growth dynamics, and the final topology of the deposit. For the first time, we have experimentally presented a proof-of-concept to control the aggregation of live active matter like bacteria without any direct contact. The methodology can have ramifications in biomedical applications like disease detection and bacterial segregation.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Inc
ID Code:133129
Deposited On:26 Dec 2022 11:02
Last Modified:26 Dec 2022 11:02

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