Experiments and models were used to determine the extent to which aqueous bromine permeated into, and reacted with, the elastomer polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). Thin films of PDMS were immersed in bromine water, and the absorbance of bromine in the aqueous phase was measured as a function of time. Kinetics were studied as a function of mass and thickness of the immersed PDMS films. We attribute the decrease of bromine in solution to permeation into PDMS, followed by a combination of diffusion, reversible binding, and an irreversible reaction with PDMS. In order to decouple the irreversible reaction from the reversible processes, kinetics were also studied for bromine-passivated PDMS films. Fits of the models to a variety of experiments yielded the partition coefficient of bromine between the water and PDMS phases, the diffusion constant of bromine in PDMS, the irreversible reaction constant between bromine and PDMS, the molar concentration of the reactive sites within PDMS, and the on and off rates of reversible binding of bromine to PDMS. Developing a quantitative reaction-diffusion model accounting for the transport of bromine through PDMS is necessary for the design of microfluidic devices fabricated using PDMS, which are used in experimental studies of the nonlinear dynamics of reaction-diffusion networks containing Belousov-Zhabotinsky chemical oscillators.
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Impact of PDMS-Based Microfluidics on Belousov–Zhabotinsky Chemical Oscillators
Sub-nanoliter volumes of the Belousov-Zhabotinsky (BZ) reaction are sealed in microfluidic devices made from polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). Bromine, which is a BZ reaction intermediate that participates in the inhibitory pathway of the reaction, is known to permeate into PDMS, and it has been suggested that PDMS and bromine can react ( J. Phys. Chem. A. 108, 2004, 1325-1332). We characterize the extent to which PDMS affects BZ oscillations by varying the volume of the PDMS surrounding the BZ reactors. We measure how the oscillation period varies with PDMS volume and compare with a theoretical reaction-diffusion model, concluding that bromine reacts with PDMS. We demonstrate that minimizing the amount of PDMS by making the samples as thin as possible maximizes the number of oscillations before the BZ reaction reaches equilibrium and ceases to oscillate. We also demonstrate that the deleterious effects of the PDMS-BZ interactions are somewhat mitigated by imposing constant chemical boundary conditions through using a light-sensitive catalyst, ruthenium, in combination with patterned illumination. Furthermore, we show that light can modulate the frequency and phase of the BZ oscillators contained in a PDMS matrix by 20-30%.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2011846
- PAR ID:
- 10506763
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Chemical Society
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Volume:
- 124
- Issue:
- 51
- ISSN:
- 1520-6106
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 11690 to 11698
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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