Premix membrane emulsification (PME) is a pressure driven process of droplet breakup, caused by their motion
through membrane pores. The process is widely used for high-throughput production of sized-controlled emulsion
droplets and microparticles using low energy inputs. The resultant droplet size depends on numerous process,
membrane, and formulation factors such as flow velocity in pores, number of extrusions, initial droplet size, internal
membrane geometry, wettability of pore walls, and physical properties of emulsion. This paper provides a
comprehensive review of different mechanisms of droplet deformation and breakup in membranes with versatile
pore morphologies including sintered glass and ceramic filters, SPG and polymeric membranes with sponge-like
structures, micro-engineered metallic membranes with ordered straight-through pore arrays, and dynamic
membranes composed of unconsolidated particles. Fundamental aspects of droplet motion and breakup in idealized
pore networks have also been covered including droplet disruption in T-junctions, channel constrictions, and
obstructed channels. The breakup mechanisms due to shear interactions with pore walls and localized shear (direct
breaking) or due to interfacial tension effects and Rayleigh-Plateau instability (indirect breaking) were
systematically discussed based on recent experimental and numerical studies. Non-dimensional droplet size
correlations based on capillary, Weber, and Ohnesorge numbers were also presented.
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Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Advances in Colloid and Interface Science and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cis.2021.102393