A microfluidic labyrinth self-assembled by a chemical garden.
Sergio Testón-MartínezTeresa Huertas-RoldánPamela KnollLaura M BargeClaro Ignacio Sainz-DíazJulyan H E CartwrightPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
Chemical gardens, self-assembling precipitates that spontaneously form when a metal salt is added to a solution of another precipitating anion, are of interest for various applications including producing reactive materials in controlled structures. Here, we report on two chemical garden reaction systems (CuCl 2 and Cu(NO 3 ) 2 seed crystals submerged in sodium silicate) that produced self-assembled microfluidic labyrinths in a vertical 2D Hele-Shaw reactor. The formation of labyrinths as well as the specific growth modes of the precipitate were dependent on the silicate concentration: CuCl 2 labyrinths formed only at 3 and 4 M silicate and Cu(NO 3 ) 2 labyrinths formed only at 4 and 5 M silicate. The labyrinth structures contained silicate on the exterior and crystalline material interpreted as hydrated minerals from the metal salt in their interiors. The bubble-guided tubes that form labyrinths can be controlled by changing the angle of the 2D reaction cell; this suggests that future experiments of this type could form self-organizing structures with controlled composition and orientation for use in microfluidics and various materials science applications.