Abstract

A comprehensive understanding of the physics of electrowetting of a surfactant-laden droplet is important for applications in rapid healthcare diagnostics. A majority of biological samples examined during point-of-care (POC) diagnostics are biofluids with dissolved surfactants, such as the respiratory droplets containing protein (mucin) and surfactant molecules like dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine. The presence of these surfactant molecules is anticipated to have a significant impact on the performance of electrowetting-based POC diagnostic devices. A reduced-order model is developed using the weighted residual integral boundary layer theory for the electrowetting of a surfactant-laden sessile droplet in a parallel plate electrode configuration. Thin film evolution equations are obtained for the fluid-fluid interface, the surfactant concentration, the depth-integrated flow rate, and the interfacial charge density. We show that the presence of surfactants opposes and decreases the strength of the electrohydrodynamic flow due to Marangoni stress-driven convection. The droplet then responds to an AC field with a suppressed amplitude of oscillation and the same mean deformation as that under DC forcing. Thus, low-frequency AC forcing with a suitable surfactant can plausibly be employed as a viable alternative to more energy-intensive high-frequency AC forcing.

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