Microfluidic chips can generate emulsions, which can be used to synthesize polymer microparticles that have superior pharmacological performance compared to particles prepared by conventional techniques. However, low production rates of… Click to show full abstract
Microfluidic chips can generate emulsions, which can be used to synthesize polymer microparticles that have superior pharmacological performance compared to particles prepared by conventional techniques. However, low production rates of microfluidics remains a challenge to successfully translate laboratory discoveries to commercial manufacturing. We present a silicon and glass device that incorporates an array of 10,260 (285 × 36) microfluidic droplet generators that uses only a single set of inlets and outlets, increasing throughput by >10,000× compared to microfluidics with a single generator. Our design breaks the tradeoff between the number of generators and the maximum throughput of individual generators by incorporating high aspect ratio flow resistors. We test these design strategies by generating hexadecane microdroplets at >1 trillion droplets per h with a coefficient of variation CV <3%. To demonstrate the synthesis of biocompatible microparticles, we generated 8–16 µm polycaprolactone particles with a CV <5% at a rate of 277 g h−1.Microfluidic-generated polymer microparticles have been shown to have superior pharmacological performance; yet, mass production remains a challenge to industrial application. Here, the authors present and test a device that incorporates arrays of microparticle generators for mass production.
               
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