Issue 22, 2011

Microrheometry of sub-nanolitre biopolymer samples: non-Newtonian flow phenomena of carnivorous plant mucilage

Abstract

Sundew plants (Drosera) capture insects using tiny drops of a viscoelastic fluid. These mucilage droplets are typically tens of micrometres in diameter, corresponding to fluid volumes in, or below, the nanolitre range. In contrast to other carnivorous plants, the physical principles and the role of rheology in the capturing mechanism are not yet fully understood. The rather simple chemical composition reported for the capturing fluid (a high molecular weight acidic polysaccharide composed of a D-glucurono-D-mannan backbone with alternating monosaccharide sidegroups) is in stark contrast to the compositional and structural complexity of other biological materials with strong extensional responses, including fibers, silks, or mucins. Here we show that the strategy used by the sundew plant combines the effects of high fluid viscosity, extensional viscoelasticity, capillary thinning and a liquid-to-solid transition driven by solvent mass transfer and aided by extensional strain-stiffening. When stretched to large extensional strains, beads-on-a-string type morphologies develop and remain frozen in place, presumably due to the combined effects of extensional strain stiffening and drying. More generally, we demonstrate how the rheological material functions of microscopic biopolymer samples in the sub-nanolitre range can be measured using an interferometry-based microrheometer for shear deformations and a capillary thinning microrheometer for extensional deformations.

Graphical abstract: Microrheometry of sub-nanolitre biopolymer samples: non-Newtonian flow phenomena of carnivorous plant mucilage

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 May 2011
Accepted
23 Aug 2011
First published
05 Oct 2011

Soft Matter, 2011,7, 10889-10898

Microrheometry of sub-nanolitre biopolymer samples: non-Newtonian flow phenomena of carnivorous plant mucilage

P. Erni, M. Varagnat, C. Clasen, J. Crest and G. H. McKinley, Soft Matter, 2011, 7, 10889 DOI: 10.1039/C1SM05815K

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