Sub-millimeter air-filled toroidal bubbles featuring easily reversible and rapid shape change.

ORAL

Abstract


Researchers have experimentally observed and generated liquid-filled vesicles in the toroidal topology, but small, air-filled toroids have not been reported. Here we report a facile method to generate air-filled toroidal bubbles coated by a particularly rugged amphipathic protein membrane made from filamentous fungi. The "air donuts" fall into the sub-millimeter size and are believed to be the world's first air-filled toroidal bubbles in this size scale. The major and minor ring radii ratio of the "air donuts" has a value of
โˆš2, which is in an agreement with the liquid-filled vesicle literature. During the formation of "air donuts" under certain easy-to-meet conditions, the bubbles' shapes transform from cylinders to spheres, and ultimately to toroids. The sphere-to-toroid transition is reversible, which is surprising from the topology point of view. The air-filled toroidal vesicles could provide opportunities in the field of aerosol (flavor and fragrance) delivery applications.

*Supported by the Georgia Tech Center for Research on Active Surfaces and Interfaces, a part of the Science and Technology of Advanced Materials and Interfaces initiative.

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Presenters

  • Paul Russo

    • Georgia Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Paul Russo

    • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Xujun Zhang

    • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Andrew Gorman

    • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Peter Yunker

    • Georgia Institute of Technology
    • School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology
    • Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology
  • Saad Bhamla

    • School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
    • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • H. Qi

    • Georgia Institute of Technology