119 research outputs found

    Recent developments in manufacturing multiple emulsions using membrane and micro fluidic devices

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    Membrane and microfluidic devices are new routes for controllable production of multiple emulsions with uniformly sized drops and accurate control of the internal drop structure. Membrane emulsification involves injecting single emulsion through a porous membrane into continuous phase in a stirred cell or cross-flow membrane module. In this work an alternative method to generate shear at the membrane surface was applied, based on the low frequency oscillation of the membrane at 10-90 Hz in a direction perpendicular to the flow of the injected phase. The advantage of oscillating membrane technique is that the risk of the drop breakage in the continuous phase is minimal, because the shear is generated only at the membrane surface. The oscillation signal was provided by an audio generator which fed a power amplifier driving the electro-mechanical oscillator on which the inlet manifold was mounted. The membrane was a microsieve-type membrane with regular pore spacing formed by Ni electroforming. At the constant maximal shear stress at the membrane surface the mean size of oil globules in W/O/W emulsions decreased with increasing the amplitude of oscillation. The most narrow drop size distribution with a span of 0.36 was obtained at 70 Hz and the peak amplitude of about 0.4 mm. A disadvantage of membrane emulsification is that the internal drop structure cannot be accurately controlled. Microfluidic devices with co-axial glass microcapillaries developed in Weitz Lab have been found convenient for controllable generation of both core-shell drops and multiple emulsion drops with a controlled number of inner drops in the outer drop. In this work core-shell drops with a size between 50 and 150 μm have been produced at the production rate ranging from 1,000 to 10,000 drops/s. The shell thickness was accurately controlled by adjusting the ratio of the middle fluid flow rate to the inner fluid flow rate and the drop size decreased with increasing the outer fluid flow rate

    Emulsion templating of poly(lactic acid) particles: droplet formation behavior

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    Monodisperse poly(dl-lactic acid) (PLA) particles of diameters between 11 and 121 ?m were fabricated in flow focusing glass microcapillary devices by evaporation of dichloromethane (DCM) from emulsion droplets at room temperature. The dispersed phase was 5% (w/w) PLA in DCM containing 0.1−2 mM Nile red and the continuous phase was 5% (w/w) poly(vinyl alcohol) in reverse osmosis water. Particle diameter was 2.7 times smaller than the diameter of the emulsion droplet template indicating very low particle porosity. Monodisperse droplets have only been produced under dripping regime using a wide range of dispersed phase flow rates (0.002−7.2 cm3h-1), continuous phase flow rates (0.3−30 cm3h-1) and orifice diameters (50−237 ?m). In the dripping regime, the ratio of droplet diameter to orifice diameter was inversely proportional to the 0.39 power of the ratio of the continuous phase flow rate to dispersed phase flow rate. Highly uniform droplets with a coefficient of variation (CV) below 2 % and a ratio of the droplet diameter to orifice diameter of 0.5−1 were obtained at flow rate ratios of 4−25. Under jetting regime, polydisperse droplets (CV > 6 %) were formed by detachment from relatively long jets (between 4 and 10 times longer than droplet diameter) and a ratio of the droplet size to orifice size was 2−5

    Fabrication of monodisperse poly(dl- lactic acid) microparticles using drop microfluidics

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    Monodisperse poly(dl-lactic acid) particles with a diameter between 11 and 121 μm were fabricated by drop microfluidics/solvent evaporation method using flow focusing glass capillary device. In the dripping regime, the ratio of droplet diameter to orifice diameter was in the range of 0.37−1.34 and was inversely proportional to the 0.39 power of the ratio of the continuous phase flow rate to dispersed phase flow rate

    Fabrication of biodegradable poly(lactic acid) particles in flow-focusing glass capillary devices

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    Monodisperse poly(dl-lactic acid) (PLA) particles with a diameter in the range from 12 to 100 9m were fabricated in flow focusing glass capillary devices by evaporation of dichloromethane (DCM) from emulsions at room temperature. The dispersed phase was 5% (w/w) PLA in DCM containing a small amount of Nile red and the continuous phase was 5% (w/w) poly(vinyl alcohol) in reverse osmosis water. Particle diameter was 2.7 times smaller than the size of the emulsion droplet template indicating that the particle porosity was very low. SEM images revealed that the majority of particle pores are in the sub-micron region but in some instances these pores can reach 3 9m in diameter. Droplet diameter was influenced by the flow rates of the two phases and the entry diameter of the collection capillary tube; droplet diameters decreased with increasing values of the flow rate ratio of the dispersed to continuous phase to reach constant minimum values at 40-60 % orifice diameter. At flow rate ratios less than 5, jetting can occur, giving rise to large droplets formed by detachment from relatively long jets (~10 times longer than droplet diameter)

    Control over the shell thickness of core/shell drops in three-phase glass capillary devices

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    Control over the shell thickness of core/shell drops in three-phase glass capillary device

    Control over the shell thickness of core/shell drops in three-phase glass capillary devices

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    Monodisperse core/shell drops with aqueous core and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) shell of controllable thickness have been produced using a glass microcapillary device that combines co-flow and flow-focusing geometries. The throughput of the droplet generation was high, with droplet generation frequency in the range from 1,000 to 10,000 Hz. The size of the droplets can be tuned by changing the flow rate of the continuous phase. The technique enables control over the shell thickness through adjusting the flow rate ratio of the middle to inner phase. As the flow rate of the middle and inner phase increases, the droplet breakup occurs in the dripping-to-jetting transition regime, with each double emulsion droplet containing two monodisperse internal aqueous droplets. The resultant drops can be used subsequently as templates for monodisperse polymer capsules with a single or multiple inner compartments, as well as functional vesicles such as liposomes, polymersomes and colloidosomes

    Janus Microgels Produced from Functional Precursor Polymers

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    Micrometer-sized Janus particles of many kinds can be formed using droplet microfluidics, but in existing methods, the microfluidic templating is strongly coupled to the material synthesis, since droplet solidification occurs through rapid polymerization right after droplet formation. This circumstance limits independent control of the material properties and the morphology of the resultant particles. In this paper, we demonstrate a microfluidic technique to produce functional Janus microgels from prefabricated, cross-linkable precursor polymers. This approach separates the polymer synthesis from the particle gelation, thus allowing the microfluidic droplet templating and the functionalization of the matrix polymer to be performed and controlled in two independent steps. We use microfluidic devices to emulsify semidilute solutions of cross-linkable, chemically modified or unmodified poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) precursors and solidify the drops via polymer-analogous gelation. The resultant microgel particles exhibit two distinguishable halves which contain most of the modified precursors, and the unmodified matrix polymer separates these materials. The spatial distribution of the modified precursors across the particles can be controlled by the flow rates during the microfluidic experiments. We also form hollow microcapsules with two different sides (Janus shells) using double emulsion droplets as templates, and we produce Janus microgels that are loaded with a ferromagnetic additive which allows remote actuation of the microgels

    Amphiphilic Crescent-Moon-Shaped Microparticles Formed by Selective Adsorption of Colloids

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    We use a microfluidic device to prepare monodisperse amphiphilic particles in the shape of a crescent-moon and use these particles to stabilize oil droplets in water. The microfluidic device is comprised of a tapered capillary in a theta (θ) shape that injects two oil phases into water in a single receiving capillary. One oil is a fluorocarbon, while the second is a photocurable monomer, which partially wets the first oil drop; silica colloids in the monomer migrate and adsorb to the interface with water but do not protrude into the oil interface. Upon UV-induced polymerization, solid particles with the shape of a crescent moon are formed; removal of fluorocarbon oil yields amphiphilic particles due to the selective adsorption of silica colloids. The resultant amphiphilic microparticles can be used to stabilize oil drops in a mixture of water and ethanol; if they are packed to sufficient surface density on the interface of the oil drop, they become immobilized, preventing direct contact between neighboring drops, thereby providing the stability

    Stabilization of the Amorphous Structure of Spray-Dried Drug Nanoparticles

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    The bioavailability of hydrophobic drugs strongly increases if they are formulated as amorphous materials because the solubility of the amorphous phase is much higher than that of the crystal. Moreover, the stability of these particles against crystallization during storage increases with decreasing particle size. Hence, it is advantageous to formulate poorly water soluble drugs as amorphous nanoparticles. The formulation of an amorphous structure is often difficult because many of these drugs have a high propensity to crystallize. This difficulty can be overcome if drugs are spray-dried using a microfluidic nebulator we recently developed. However, these nanoparticles agglomerate when they come in contact with each other, and this compromises the stability of their amorphous structure through crystallization. To improve their stability, we coat the nanoparticles with a sterically stabilizing polymer layer; this can be accomplished by co-spraying them with an excipient. However, this excipient must meet strict solubility limits, which severely limit the choice of polymers. Alternatively, the nanoparticles can be sterically stabilized by spraying them directly into a polymeric matrix; this enables a much wider choice of stabilizing polymers
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