Abstract

We present a consistent series of activities, including experiments and basic computational studies, investigating the shape and optical properties of water drops in connection with novel technological devices. Most of the work can be carried out with simple teaching equipment and is well suited to undergraduate students. Firstly, we show how the mass variations of a sessile drop can be used to control its curvature and hence to produce lenses with tunable focal distance. Alternatively, the shape of the drop can be varied using electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD). We propose a simple pedagogical approach to this phenomenon in connection with historical electrostatic apparatus. A detailed process for the preparation of an EWOD device is given, together with a focimetric method allowing the analysis of electrowetting effects in practical exercises. Finally, the manipulations of a commercialized variable focus lens illustrate that EWOD is at the heart of most recent technological developments, making practical work in optics more attractive than traditional exercises using conventional lenses.

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