Production of monodisperse polyurea microcapsules using microfluidics

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Abstract

Methods to make microcapsules – used in a broad range of healthcare and energy applications – currently suffer from poor size control, limiting the establishment of size/property relationships. Here, we use microfluidics to produce monodisperse polyurea microcapsules (PUMC) with a limonene core. Using varied flow rates and a commercial glass chip, we produce capsules with mean diameters of 27, 30, 32, 34, and 35 µm, achieving narrow capsule size distributions of ±2 µm for each size. We describe an automated method of sizing droplets as they are produced using video recording and custom Python code. The sustainable generation of such size-controlled PUMCs, potential replacements for commercial encapsulated systems, will allow new insights into the effect of particle size on performance.

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Thorne, M. F., Simkovic, F., & Slater, A. G. (2019). Production of monodisperse polyurea microcapsules using microfluidics. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-54512-4

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