Abstract

AbstractThe ability of nanoparticles to penetrate and transport through soft tissues is essential to delivering therapeutics to treat diseases or signaling agents for advanced imaging and sensing. Nanoparticle transport in biological systems, however, is challenging to predict and control due to the physicochemical complexity of tissues and biological fluids. Here, we demonstrate that nanoparticles suspended in a novel class of soft matter—polymer‐linked emulsions (PLEs)—exhibit characteristics essential for mimicking transport in biological systems, including subdiffusive dynamics, non‐Gaussian displacement distributions, and decoupling of dynamics from material viscoelasticity. Using multiple particle tracking, we identify the physical mechanisms underlying this behavior, which we attribute to a coupling of nanoparticle dynamics to fluctuations in the local network of polymer‐linked droplets. Our findings demonstrate the potential of PLEs to serve as fully synthetic mimics of biological transport.

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