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We measured the effective diffusion coefficient in regions of microfluidic networks of controlled geometry using the FRAP (Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching) technique. The geometry of the networks was based on Voronoi tessellations, and had varying characteristic length scale and porosity. For a fixed network, FRAP experiments were performed in regions of increasing size. Our results indicate that the boundary of the bleached region, and in particular the cumulative area of the channels that connect the bleached region to the rest of the network, are important in the measured value of the effective diffusion coefficient. We found that the statistical geometrical variations between different regions of the network decrease with the size of the bleached region as a power law, meaning that the statistical error of effective medium approximations decrease with the size of the studied medium, although no characteristic length scale could be defined over which the porous medium is equivalent to an effective medium.
We present a technique to locally and rapidly heat water drops in microfluidic devices with microwave dielectric heating. Water absorbs microwave power more efficiently than polymers, glass, and oils due to its permanent molecular dipole moment that
In this paper, we construct a new family of random series defined on $R^D$, indexed by one scaling parameter and two Hurst-like exponents. The model is close to Takagi-Knopp functions, save for the fact that the underlying partitions of $R^D$ are not
A biomimetic model of cell-cell communication was developed to probe the passive molecular transport across ion channels inserted in synthetic lipid bilayers formed between contacting droplets arranged in a linear array. Diffusion of a fluorescent pr
The problem of the time required for a diffusing molecule, within a large bounded domain, to first locate a small target is prevalent in biological modeling. Here we study this problem for a small spherical target. We develop uniform in time asymptot
Determining the masses of new physics particles appearing in decay chains is an important and longstanding problem in high energy phenomenology. Recently it has been shown that these mass measurements can be improved by utilizing the boundary of the