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Fluorescence Recovery after Merging a Droplet to Measure the Two-dimensional Diffusion of a Phospholipid Monolayer
Author(s) -
Dae-Woong Jeong,
Kyu-Han Kim,
Myung Chul Choi,
Siyoung Q. Choi
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of visualized experiments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.596
H-Index - 91
ISSN - 1940-087X
DOI - 10.3791/53376
Subject(s) - fluorescence recovery after photobleaching , photobleaching , monolayer , fluorescence , fluorescence microscope , microscope , drop (telecommunication) , confocal , materials science , microscopy , thermal diffusivity , diffusion , pulmonary surfactant , analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , nanotechnology , optics , chromatography , telecommunications , biochemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , thermodynamics
We introduce a new method to measure the lateral diffusivity of a surfactant monolayer at the fluid-fluid interface, called fluorescence recovery after merging (FRAM). FRAM adopts the same principles as the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) technique, especially for measuring fluorescence recovery after bleaching a specific area, but FRAM uses a drop coalescence instead of photobleaching dye molecules to induce a chemical potential gradient of dye molecules. Our technique has several advantages over FRAP: it only requires a fluorescence microscope rather than a confocal microscope equipped with high power lasers; it is essentially free from the selection of fluorescence dyes; and it has far more freedom to define the measured diffusion area. Furthermore, FRAM potentially provides a route for studying the mixing or inter-diffusion of two different surfactants, when the monolayers at a surface of droplet and at a flat air/water interface are prepared with different species, independently.

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