Wetting-mediated collective tubulation and pearling in confined vesicular drops of DDAB solutions

Haidara, H

HERO ID

4220639

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

25343282

HERO ID 4220639
In Press No
Year 2014
Title Wetting-mediated collective tubulation and pearling in confined vesicular drops of DDAB solutions
Authors Haidara, H
Journal Soft Matter
Volume 10
Issue 47
Page Numbers 9460-9469
Abstract Whether driven by external mechanical stresses (shear flow) or induced by membrane-active peptides and/or proteins, the collective growth of tubules in membranous fluids has seldom been reported. The pearling destabilization of these membranous tubules which requires an activation of the shape distortion, often induced by optical tweezers, membrane-active biomolecules or an electrical field, has also rarely been observed under mild experimental conditions. Here we report such events of collective tubulation and pearling destabilization in sessile drops of a didodecyl-dimethylammonium bromide (DDAB) vesicular solution that are confined by a surrounding oil medium. Based on the wetting dynamics and the features of the tubulation process, we show that the growth of the tubules here relies on a mechanism of "pinning-induced pulling" from the retracting drop, rather than the classical hydrodynamic fingering instability. We show that the whole tubulation process is driven by a strong coupling between the bulk properties of the ternary (DAAB/water/oil) system and the dynamics of wetting. Finally, we discuss the pearling destabilization of these tubules under vanishing static interface tension and quite mild tensile force arising from their pulling. We show that under those mild conditions, shape disturbances readily grow, either as pearling waves moving toward the drop-reservoir or as Rayleigh-type peristaltic modulations. Besides revealing singular non-Rayleigh pearling modes, this work also brings new insights into the flow dynamics in membranous tubules anchored to an infinite reservoir.
Doi 10.1039/c4sm01579g
Pmid 25343282
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English