Design and fabrication of uniquely shaped thiol-ene microfibers using a two-stage hydrodynamic focusing design

被引:43
作者
Boyd, Darryl A. [1 ]
Shields, Adam R. [1 ]
Howell, Peter B., Jr. [1 ]
Ligler, Frances S. [1 ]
机构
[1] USN, Res Lab, Washington, DC 20375 USA
关键词
FIBERS; SILK;
D O I
10.1039/c3lc50413a
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Microfluidic systems have advantages that are just starting to be realized for materials fabrication. In addition to the more common use for fabrication of particles, hydrodynamic focusing has been used to fabricate continuous polymer fibers. We have previously described such a microfluidics system which has the ability to generate fibers with controlled cross-sectional shapes locked in place by in situ photopolymerization. The previous fiber fabrication studies produced relatively simple round or ribbon shapes, demonstrated the use of a variety of polymers, and described the interaction between sheath-core flow-rate ratios used to control the fiber diameter and the impact on possible shapes. These papers documented the fact that no matter what the intended shape, higher flow-rate ratios produced rounder fibers, even in the absence of interfacial tension between the core and sheath fluids. This work describes how to fabricate the next generation of fibers predesigned to have a much more complex geometry, as exemplified by the "double anchor'' shape. Critical to production of the pre-specified fibers with complex features was independent control over both the shape and the size of the fabricated microfibers using a two-stage hydrodynamic focusing system. Design and optimization of the channels was performed using finite element simulations and confocal imaging to characterize each of the two stages theoretically and experimentally. The resulting device design was then used to generate thiol-ene fibers with a unique double anchor shape. Finally, proof-of-principle functional experiments demonstrated the ability of the fibers to transport fluids and to interlock laterally.
引用
收藏
页码:3105 / 3110
页数:6
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]   Templating Quantum Dot to Phase-Transformed Electrospun TiO2 Nanofibers for Enhanced Photo-Excited Electron Injection [J].
Aykut, Yakup ;
Saquing, Carl D. ;
Pourdeyhimi, Behnam ;
Parsons, Gregory N. ;
Khan, Saad A. .
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 2012, 4 (08) :3837-3845
[2]   Toughening of artificial silk by incorporation of carbon nanotubes [J].
Blond, David ;
McCarthy, Denis N. ;
Blau, Werner J. ;
Coleman, Jonathan N. .
BIOMACROMOLECULES, 2007, 8 (12) :3973-3976
[3]   Hydrodynamic Shaping, Polymerization, and Subsequent Modification of Thiol Click Fibers [J].
Boyd, Darryl A. ;
Shields, Adam R. ;
Naciri, Jawad ;
Ligler, Frances S. .
ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 2013, 5 (01) :114-119
[4]   Beyond PDMS: off-stoichiometry thiol-ene (OSTE) based soft lithography for rapid prototyping of microfluidic devices [J].
Carlborg, Carl Fredrik ;
Haraldsson, Tommy ;
Oberg, Kim ;
Malkoch, Michael ;
van der Wijngaart, Wouter .
LAB ON A CHIP, 2011, 11 (18) :3136-3147
[5]   Microfluidic fabrication of complex-shaped microfibers by liquid template-aided multiphase microflow [J].
Choi, Chang-Hyung ;
Yi, Hyunmin ;
Hwang, Sora ;
Weitz, David A. ;
Lee, Chang-Soo .
LAB ON A CHIP, 2011, 11 (08) :1477-1483
[6]   MELT-SPUN NONCIRCULAR CARBON-FIBERS [J].
EDIE, DD ;
FOX, NK ;
BARNETT, BC ;
FAIN, CC .
CARBON, 1986, 24 (04) :477-482
[7]   Reaction Rates and Mechanisms for Radical, Photoinitated Addition of Thiols to Alkynes, and Implications for Thiol-Yne Photopolymerizations and Click Reactions [J].
Fairbanks, Benjamin D. ;
Sims, Evan A. ;
Anseth, Kristi S. ;
Bowman, Christopher N. .
MACROMOLECULES, 2010, 43 (09) :4113-4119
[8]   Thiol-Yne Photopolymerizations: Novel Mechanism, Kinetics, and Step-Growth Formation of Highly Cross-Linked Networks [J].
Fairbanks, Benjamin D. ;
Scott, Timothy F. ;
Kloxin, Christopher J. ;
Anseth, Kristi S. ;
Bowman, Christopher N. .
MACROMOLECULES, 2009, 42 (01) :211-217
[9]  
HAILE WA, 1995, TAPPI J, V78, P139
[10]   Two simple and rugged designs for creating microfluidic sheath flow [J].
Howell, Peter B., Jr. ;
Golden, Joel P. ;
Hilliard, Lisa R. ;
Erickson, Jeffrey S. ;
Mott, David R. ;
Ligler, Frances S. .
LAB ON A CHIP, 2008, 8 (07) :1097-1103