Browsing by Subject "Monodispersity"
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Item Open Access Damping hydrodynamic fluctuations in microfluidic systems(Elsevier, 2018) Kalantarifard, Ali; Haghighi, Elnaz Alizadeh; Elbüken, ÇağlarIn this article, we report a method to damp microfluidic hydrodynamic fluctuations caused by flow sources. We demonstrate that compliance of elastomeric off-chip tubings can be used to damp fluctuations and lead to steady flow rates. We analyze the whole microfluidic system using electrical circuit analogies, and demonstrate that off-chip compliances are significant, especially for displacement pump driven systems. We apply this hydrodynamic damping method to microfluidic droplet generation. Our results show that highly monodisperse microdroplets can be obtained by syringe pump driven systems utilizing this damping effect. We reached a coefficient of variation of 0.39% for the microdroplet area using a standard T-junction geometry. Additionally, we demonstrated that pressure pumps inherently use this effect, and have so far led the high performances reported in the literature in terms of droplet monodispersity. The presented off-chip hydrodynamic damping method is not only low-cost and practical, but can also be used in elastomeric and rigid microchannels without need to introduce additional components to the fluidic circuit.Item Open Access Fabrication of nanowalled catalytically self-threaded supramolecular polyrotaxane microcapsules using droplet microfluidics(American Chemical Society, 2022-04-11) Alizadeh-Haghighi, Elnaz; Khaligh, Aisan; Kalantarifard, Ali; Elbuken, Caglar; Tuncel, DönüsMicrometer-scale monodisperse droplets are produced to generate nanowalled supramolecular microcapsules using microfluidics for high reproducibility and high-throughput manipulation, efficient material consumption, and control over hierarchical structure, shape, and size. In this study, an optimized microfluidic droplet generation technique and a unique liquid-liquid interfacial polymerization method were applied to fabricate the monodisperse polyrotaxane-based supramolecular microcapsules in a fast and simple way. To minimize the uncertainty due to droplet volume variation, the inlet pressures were supplied from the same source while lowering the interfacial tension and the main channel hydrodynamic resistance, which are critical for high monodispersity. The target polyrotaxane network (PN) was simply formed at the interface of the water and oil phases in ultra-monodisperse microdroplets via the cucurbit[6]uril (CB6)-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CB6-AAC) reaction between azido- and alkyne-functionalized tetraphenylporphyrin monomers (TPP-4AZ and TPP-4AL). The thickness of the interfacially assembled PN microcapsules was 20 nm as analyzed by cross-sectional TEM and TEM-EDX techniques. The resultant water-in-oil PN microcapsules were highly monodisperse in size and able to retain target molecules. Here, rhodamine 6G (Rh6G)-loaded PN microcapsules were fabricated, and the release rate of the Rh6G cargo was investigated over time for controlled drug release applications.Item Open Access A microfluidic droplet system for ultra-monodisperse droplet generation: A universal approach(Elsevier Ltd, 2022-07-22) Kalantarifard, Ali; Alizadeh-Haghighi, Elnaz; Elbüken, ÇağlarDespite the importance of droplet monodispersity, a universal methodology for high monodispersity droplet generation does not exist yet. We have recently demonstrated that unlike the conventional method of droplet generation, applying an identical pressure from a single source makes the microfluidic droplet system immune to the external fluctuations that originate from the imperfection of the flow source. In this work, we show that our method is universal and applicable to other common microfluidic devices and flow sources. We applied this method to flow-focusing and coflow devices that are commonly used for high-frequency microdroplet generation. In addition to the pressure pump, we used a syringe pump to show that our method is applicable to flow rate controllable systems as well. We compared the monodispersity of droplets formed by the conventional methods and the novel method explained in this work. © 2022 The AuthorsItem Open Access Theoretical and experimental limits of monodisperse droplet generation(Elsevier Ltd, 2021-01-16) Ali, Kalantarifard; Elnaz, Alizadeh-Haghighi; Abtin, Saateh; Elbüken, ÇağlarDroplet microfluidic systems are becoming routine in advanced biochemical studies such as single cell gene expression, immuno profiling, precise nucleic acid quantification (dPCR) and particle synthesis. For all these applications, ensuring droplet monodispersity is critical to minimize the uncertainty due to droplet volume variation. Despite the wide usage of droplet-based microfluidic systems, the limit of monodispersity for droplet generation systems is still unknown. Here, we present an analytical approach that takes into account all the system dynamics and internal/external factors that disturb monodispersity. Interestingly, we are able to model the dynamics of a segmented two-phase flow system using a single-phase flow analogy, electron flow, in electrical circuits. We offer a unique solution and design guidelines to ensure ultra-monodisperse droplet generation. Our analytical conclusions are experimentally verified using a T-junction droplet generator. Equally importantly, we show the limiting experimental factors for reaching the theoretical maximum of monodispersity.