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Creators/Authors contains: "Sun, Yueming"

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  1. With the developments in nanotechnology, nanofibrous materials attract great attention as possible platforms for fluidic engineering. This requires an understanding of droplet interactions with fibers when gravity plays no significant role. This work aims to classify all possible axisymmetric configurations of droplets on fibers. The contact angle that the drop makes with the fiber surface is allowed to change from 0° to 180°. Nodoidal apple-like droplets with inverted menisci cusped toward the droplet center and unduloidal droplets with menisci cusped away from the droplet center were introduced and fully analyzed. The existing theory describing axisymmetric droplets on fibers is significantly enriched introducing new morphological configurations of droplets. It is experimentally shown that the barreled droplets could be formed on non-wettable fibers offering contact angles greater than 90°. The theory was quantitatively confirmed with hemispherical droplets formed at the end of a capillary tube and satisfying all the boundary conditions of the model. It is expected that the developed theory could be used for the design of nanofiber-based fluidic devices and for drop-on-demand technologies. 
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  2. Hovering hawkmoths expend significant energy while feeding, which should select for greater feeding efficiency. Although increased feeding efficiency has been implicitly assumed, it has never been assessed. We hypothesized that hawkmoths have proboscises specialized for gathering nectar passively. Using contact angle and capillary pressure to evaluate capillary action of the proboscis, we conducted a comparative analysis of wetting and absorption properties for 13 species of hawkmoths. We showed that all 13 species have a hydrophilic proboscis. In contradistinction, the proboscises of all other tested lepidopteran species have a wetting dichotomy with only the distal ∼10% hydrophilic. Longer proboscises are more wettable, suggesting that species of hawkmoths with long proboscises are more efficient at acquiring nectar by the proboscis surface than are species with shorter proboscises. All hawkmoth species also show strong capillary pressures which, together with the feeding behaviors we observed, ensure that nectar will be delivered to the food canal efficiently. The patterns we found suggest that different subfamilies of hawkmoths use different feeding strategies. Our comparative approach reveals that hawkmoths are unique among Lepidoptera and highlights the importance of considering the physical characteristics of the proboscis to understand the evolution and diversification of hawkmoths. 
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  3. Drop-on-demand (DOD) printing is a versatile manufacturing tool, which has been widely used in applications ranging from graphic products to manufacturing of ceramics, even for cell engineering. However, the existing DOD methods cannot be applied for highly viscous materials: the printing technologies are typically limited to the inks with the water level viscosity and fall short to eject jets from thick fluids and break them into droplets. To address this challenge, a new wire-in-a-tube technology for drop generation has been developed replacing the nozzle generator with a wire-in-a-tube drop generator. We successfully formed droplets on demand from highly viscous (∼10 Pa s) liquids and studied the mechanisms of drop formation in the wire-in-a-tube drop generators. These mechanisms couple unique fluid mechanics, capillarity, and wetting phenomena providing a new platform that can be used in different microfluidic applications. 
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