| Literature DB >> 31592185 |
Randall Scanga1, Lucie Chrastecka2, Ridhwan Mohammad2, Austin Meadows2, Phenix-Lan Quan2, Eric Brouzes2,3.
Abstract
We report the novel and simplified synthesis of fluorinated surfactants for droplet microfluidics. The range of applications of droplet microfluidics has greatly expanded during the last decade thanks to its ability to manipulate and process tiny amount of sample and reagents at high throughput in independent reactors. A critical component of the technology is the formulation of the immiscible oil phase that contains surfactants to stabilize droplets. The success of droplet microfluidics relies mostly on a single fluorinated formulation that uses a PFPE-PEG tri-block surfactant. The synthesis of this surfactant is laborious and requires skills in synthetic chemistry preventing the wider community to explore the synthesis of alternate surfactants. We sought to provide a simplified synthesis for novel PFPE-PEG surfactants based on click chemistry approaches such as copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) and UV-activated thiol-yne reactions. Our strategy is based on converting a moisture sensitive intermediate typically used in the synthesis of the tri-block PFPE-PEG surfactant into a stable and click ready molecule. We successfully combined that fluorinated tail with differently functionalized PEG and glycerol ethoxylate molecules to generate surfactants with diverse structures via CuACC and thiol-yne reactions. We report the characterization, biocompatibility and ability to stabilize emulsions of those surfactants, as well as the unique advantages and challenges of the strategy.Entities:
Keywords: click chemistry; droplet microfluidics; droplets; fluorinated surfactants; surfactants
Year: 2018 PMID: 31592185 PMCID: PMC6779154 DOI: 10.1039/C8RA01254G
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Simplified synthesis of fluorinated surfactants by click approaches. (a) PFPE–PEG surfactant usually results from the combination of the reactive but moisture-sensitive acid chloride of Krytox (7) with a PEG diamine (3). (b) The acid chloride can easily react with water and decompose into surface-active salts (10). (c) Our strategy consists in creating a stable click ready Krytox propargyl amine intermediate (8) (from the acid chloride of Krytox) that can be easily reacted with azide or thiol functionalized PEG or glycerol ethoxylate.
Fig. 2Detailed reactions and experimental conditions of for the surfactants heads (A) and tail (B). Treatment of PFPE carboxylic acid with 3.0 equiv. (COCl)2 in refluxing HFE 7100 yields the reactive PFPE acid chloride intermediate (7). Amidation of (7) is performed in ∼3 : 1 FC 3283 : THF in the presence of 1.5 equiv. TEA with the desired amine coupling partner at RT to obtain (8, 9). During/or in preparation of the amidation reaction, reactive intermediate (7) is subject to hydrolysis reforming the parent carboxylic acid. The resultant carboxylic acid then undergoes acid–base reaction with available amines to form ammonium salts (10). Ammonium salts (10) can also undergo decarboxylation to PFPE-HEC (11) on heating.
Fig. 3Surfactant synthesis and resulting structure diversity highlighting the central role played by the intermediate Krytox propargyl amine (8) that can be combined with either a homo-bifunctional PEG or a 3-arm homo-functional glycerol ethoxylate by CuAAC or thiol–yne reactions. Those reactions permit the generation of PFPE–PEG surfactants with a variety of structures. CuAAC (12): 10 mol% Cu(OAc)2, 20 mol% sodium ascorbate, 16 mol% neocuproine; 1 : 1 HFE 7100 : 1 : 1 MeOH/H2O, 60 °C, 48 h, thiol–yne (13): 0.2 equiv. DMPA, UV 365 nm; 2 : 1 HFE 7100 : MeOH, RT, 48 h, CuAAC (14): 15 mol% Cu(OAc)2, 35 mol% sodium ascorbate, 30 mol% TBTA; 1 : 1 HFE 7500 : 2 : 1 MeCN/H2O, 80 °C, 48 h, thiol–yne (15): 0.2 equiv. DMPA, UV 365 nm; 2 : 1 HFE 7100 : MeOH, RT, 48 h.
Outcome of the CuAAC and photo-activated thiol–yne reactions. Note: calculations exclude glycerol backbone, and only account for PEG MW. See ESI for total compositional analysis
| Structure | Entry | PEG MW/PFPE Chain | PFPE | Conversion(1H NMR) | Physical aspect at 30% wt in HFE 7500 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Linear PFPE–PEG triazole linked triblock | (12) | ∼300 g mol−1 | 5840 | 95% | Cloudy and yellowish with streaks |
| Brush-like sulfide linked PFPE–PEG | (13) | ∼300 g mol−1 | 5840 | 71% | Clear and yellowish |
| 3-arm star PFPE–PEG triazole linked tetrablock | (14) | ∼300 g mol−1 | 5840 | 70% | Clear and very pale yellow |
| Hyperbranched sulfide linked PFPE–PEG | (15) | ∼600 g mol−1 | 5840 | 65% | Cloudy and yellowish with streaks |
Fig. 4Interfacial energies of the click fluorinated surfactants in HFE 7500 as a function of their weight concentrations reveal a wide range of behaviors.
Physico-chemical characterization of surfactants dissolved in HFE 7500 obtained by the pendent drop method with de-ionized water. HFB: Hydrophilic–Fluorophilic Balance
| Surfactant in HFE 7500 | HFB |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PFPE–PEG | 0.98 | 0.2 | 0.6 | 5.1 |
| Click PFPE–PEG | 0.98 | 0.9 | 0.3 | 8.6 |
| 3-arm PFPE–PEG star | 1.08 | 0.2 | >30 | <16.4 |
| Brush-like PFPE–PEG | 1.02 | 3.4 | 1.3 | 10.6 |
| Hyperbranched PFPE–PEG | 2.05 | 5.6 | 1.5 | 16.4 |
Fig. 5(a) All surfactants exhibit biocompatibility with CHO cells in overlay assays after 16 hours of incubation. The proportion of GFP expressing cells is normalized by the value at time 0. (b) Cell aggregation is promoted by all the surfactants except the brush-like PFPE–PEG after 1 hour of incubation.