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Novel glass capillary microfluidic devices for the flexible and simple production of multi-cored double emulsions

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-21, 15:45 authored by Nico Leister, Goran VladisavljevicGoran Vladisavljevic, Heike P. Karbstein
Hypothesis
Double emulsions with many monodispersed internal droplets are required for the fabrication of multicompartment microcapsules and tissue-like synthetic materials. These double emulsions can also help to optically resolve different coalescence mechanisms contributing to double emulsion destabilization. Up to date microfluidic double emulsions are limited to either core-shell droplets or droplets with eight or less inner droplets. By applying a two-step jet break-up within one setup, double emulsion droplets filled with up to several hundred monodispersed inner droplets can be achieved.
Experiments
Modular interconnected CNC-milled Lego-inspired blocks were used to create two separated droplet break-up points within coaxial glass capillaries. Inner droplets were formed by countercurrent flow focusing within a small inner capillary, while outer droplets were formed by co-flow in an outer capillary. The size of inner and outer droplets was independently controlled since the two droplet break-up processes were decoupled.
Findings
With the developed setup W/O/W and O/W/O double emulsions were produced with different surfactants, oils, and viscosity modifiers to encapsulate 25 to 400 inner droplets in each outer drop with a volume percentage of inner phase between 7% and 50%. From these emulsions monodispersed multicompartment microcapsules were obtained. The report offers insights on the relationship between the coalescence of internal droplets and their release.

Funding

Enterprise Projects Group (EPG) of Loughborough University, grant 18/14606

History

School

  • Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering

Department

  • Chemical Engineering

Published in

Journal of Colloid and Interface Science

Volume

611

Pages

451-461

Publisher

Elsevier

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Elsevier

Publisher statement

This paper was accepted for publication in the journal Journal of Colloid and Interface Science and the definitive published version is available at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2021.12.094

Acceptance date

2021-12-14

Publication date

2021-12-21

Copyright date

2022

ISSN

0021-9797

eISSN

1095-7103

Language

  • en

Depositor

Dr Goran Vladisavljevic. Deposit date: 15 December 2021

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