| Literature DB >> 31783523 |
Wei Yu1, Nikunjkumar Visaveliya2, Christophe A Serra1, J Michael Köhler2, Shukai Ding1,3, Michel Bouquey1, René Muller1, Marc Schmutz1, Isabelle Kraus4.
Abstract
Polymeric microparticles were produced following a three-step procedure involving (i) the production of an aqueous nanoemulsion of tri and monofunctional acrylate-based monomers droplets by an elongational-flow microemulsifier, (ii) the production of a nanosuspension upon the continuous-flow UV-initiated miniemulsion polymerization of the above nanoemulsion and (iii) the production of core-shell polymeric microparticles by means of a microfluidic capillaries-based double droplets generator; the core phase was composed of the above nanosuspension admixed with a water-soluble monomer and gold salt, the shell phase comprised a trifunctional monomer, diethylene glycol and a silver salt; both phases were photopolymerized on-the-fly upon droplet formation. Resulting microparticles were extensively analyzed by energy dispersive X-rays spectrometry and scanning electron microscopy to reveal the core-shell morphology, the presence of silver nanoparticles in the shell, organic nanoparticles in the core but failed to reveal the presence of the gold nanoparticles in the core presumably due to their too small size (c.a. 2.5 nm). Nevertheless, the reddish appearance of the as such prepared polymer microparticles emphasized that this three-step procedure allowed the easy elaboration of composite/hybrid multi-scale and multi-domain polymeric microparticles.Entities:
Keywords: composite; gold nanoparticles; hybrid; microfluidics; nanoemulsion; polymer microparticle; polymer nanoparticles; silver nanoparticles
Year: 2019 PMID: 31783523 PMCID: PMC6926969 DOI: 10.3390/ma12233921
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Schematic drawing of the microprocess to prepare the polymerizable nanoemulsion (not at scale, (a)), dimensions of the different channels in cut AA (b).
Figure 2Picture of the UV-initiated polymerization setup to convert the polymerizable nanoemulsion into a colloidal suspension of polymer nanoparticles.
Figure 3Schematic drawing of the co-axial capillaries-based microfluidic droplet generator for the production of double droplets that were hardened downstream into core-shell microparticles by UV-initiated polymerization.
Figure 4Schematic drawing of a targeted core-shell polymeric microparticle doped with organic and inorganic nanoparticles.
Figure 5Optical image of dried composite/hybrid core-shell microparticles (A) and macro photography of two microparticles, the arrow point towards the reddish core (B).
Figure 6SEM micrograph of a core-shell polymeric microparticle.
Figure 7High magnification of the microparticles core-shell interface.
Figure 8SEM micrograph of the poly(acrylamide) core matrix exhibiting the presence of poly(TPGDA-co-MMA) nanoparticles.
Figure 9SEM compo image of a shell region recorded at 6 kV.
Figure 10SEM compo image of a core region.
Figure 11SEM micrograph of the surface of a core-shell polymeric microparticle after silver reinforcement. The silver particles are seen white due to the Z-contrast imaging.