Abstract
We report a versatile method for the generation of complex-shaped three-dimensional multi-compartmental (3D-MC) microparticles. Complex-shaped microparticles have recently received much attention for potential application in self-assemblies, micromachines and biomedical and environmental engineering. Here, we have developed a method based on 3D nonequilibrium-induced microflows (Marangoni and diffusional flows) of microdroplets that are discharged from the tip of a thin capillary in a simple centrifugal microfluidic device. The microparticle shapes can be tuned by the partial dissolution of specific compartments and by the deformation of the precursor microdroplets by manipulating the 3D microflows. We believe that this method will have wide applications in nano- and microscience and technologies.
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Introduction
Recently, microparticles have attracted much attention for use in a broad range of applications, including self-assembled materials1,2,3, self-propelled micromotors4,5,6,7, biomedical engineering of drug delivery systems8,9 and environmental engineering10. Complex-shaped microparticles with geometries that are non-spherical11,12,13, high-aspect-ratio14,15,16, or asymmetric17,18,19 have been developed20,22, which has further extended the range of applications of microparticles. Some research groups have reported microparticle fabrication methods based on the solidification of microdroplets deformed by controlling the contact angle of fluids in microfluidic devices23,24. An on-demand synthesis based on digital-microfluidic liquid handling was also reported25. These methods are useful, but the shapes and dimensions of the generated microparticles are limited (e.g., 2.5-dimensional ones). This limitation is attributed to the difficulty of controlling three-dimensional (3D) microflows during the process of microparticle generation. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a generation method that enables the construction of various-shaped three-dimensional multi-compartmental (3D-MC) microparticles by the effective control of 3D microflows.
In this study, we developed a versatile method for generating complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles based on the effective control of 3D microflows and the partial dissolution of the microparticles (Fig. 1a). The synthesis was performed using a 3D capillary microfluidic device26 that can produce spherical multi-compartmental microparticles (Fig. 1b; details are given in Supplementary Fig. S1). The device was composed of a glass capillary, capillary holder and disposable microtube; a CaCl2 solution was placed at the bottom of the microtube. When the device was centrifuged, the solution in the glass capillary dripped into and gelated in the CaCl2 solution at the bottom of the microtube (Fig. 1c). The produced microparticles had multiple compartments, depending on the barrel configuration of the glass capillary (Fig. 1d). This method can tune the shapes of the microdroplets using microflows induced by the nonequilibrium condition of the solutions before solidification (Fig. 1a), though no deformation is induced without microflows (Fig. 1a). For the deformation of droplets, we used a diffusional flow (Fig. 1a) and a Marangoni flow (Fig. 1a). The diffusional flow is driven by the difference in molecular concentration between the two solutions; the solution flows from higher- to lower-concentration regions. The Marangoni flow is driven by the difference in surface tension between the two solutions and it flows from solutions with lower to higher surface tensions. Both microflows continued until the difference between the two solutions relaxed into the equilibrium state; thus, the degree of deformation could be kinetically tuned by controlling the time necessary for droplet solidification. After the solidification of the deformed microdroplets, some parts of them were dissolved and finally complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles were obtained. The diffusional flow was induced within the solution, while the Marangoni flow was induced on the surface of the solution. Thus, using the two types of flow, both the interior and the surface of the droplet can be deformed, hence enabling the construction of microparticles with complex shapes. The kinetic tunability by 3D deformation is one of the unique features of this method; previous methods generally produced equilibrated shapes after the completion of deformation.
Results
Synthesis of complex-shaped microparticles without microflows
We investigated the synthesis of 3D-MC microparticles by the partial dissolution of microparticles produced without microflows (Fig. 1a). Figure 2a shows fluorescence microscopy images of the produced triple-bladed propellers (right) and spherical 3D-MC precursor microparticles before the partial dissolution (left). The insets depict the microparticle designs and the configuration of the glass capillaries with the introduced solutions. Solution-A, composed of sodium alginate (Na-alg) and agarose solution, was introduced into the green and blue parts of a septuple glass capillary and Solution-B (Na-alg solution) was introduced into the red parts. The solutions were coloured using fluorescent nanobeads. The agarose in Solution-A was intended to form the body of the complex-shaped microparticles, while Na-alg was used as a temporary gelating agent to fix the agarose into the appropriate compartment. When a centrifugal force (centrifugal acceleration a ~ 1000 × g) was applied to the capillary, the solutions dripped from the tip of the glass capillary (Fig. 1c). The microdroplets travelled through an air gap (travelling phase) and entered the CaCl2 solution. Then the Na-alg in each solution formed a calcium alginate (Ca-alg) gel and spherical 3D-MC microparticles were generated (gelling phase). To solidify the agarose, the microparticles were cooled. As a result, the green and blue parts formed an interpenetrating network gel of Ca-alg and agarose (Fig. 2a, left). After gelation, the Ca-alg gel in all parts was dissolved by removing the Ca2+ ions with the Ca-chelating agent of ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid (EDTA). After chelation, we obtained triple-bladed propellers containing solely agarose gel (Fig. 2a, right). Figure 2b presents the size distributions of the spherical precursor microparticles (blue) and the partially dissolved microparticles (green). The coefficient of variation (C.V.) was ~3%. The diameters of the partially dissolved microparticles were smaller than those of the spherical precursor microparticles. Based on the Flory theory of the swelling equilibrium of gels27, the volume of the gel is determined by the competition between the elastic force and the osmotic pressure on the gels. In this case, it is considered that the elution of the Na-alg gel induced changes in the elastic force and the osmotic pressure acting on the hydrogel microparticle, resulting in the volume change of the microparticles. The angle θ of the propeller blades was also measured with a C.V. of ~10% (Fig. 2c). This low C.V. suggests that the shape of the complex-shaped microparticles was relatively monodisperse, as well as the diameters of the particles. A variety of complex shapes, including doughnut rings (Fig. 2d), two-thirds of spheres and double-bladed propellers (see Supplementary Fig. S2), were also successfully synthesized as 3D-MC microparticles. These particles also had small C.V.s, similar to that of the triple-bladed propellers (Fig. 2e,f and Supplementary Fig. S2).
Deformation of spherical microparticles by nonequilibrium-induced microflows
We synthesized complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles by deforming the microdroplets using a nonequilibrium-induced diffusional microflow (Fig. 1a). The deformation scheme is summarized in Fig. 3a. The green part included Solution-A and the red part included Solution-B; because of the difference in the concentration of agarose between the two parts, the agarose molecules diffused from the green part to the red part (Fig. 3a and Supplementary Fig. S3). This process was expected to occur in the gelling phase, because the duration of the traveling phase was short. The time for traveling (~10−4 s) was predicted by the velocity of the shot droplet obtained from the terminal velocity (details given in Supplementary Fig. S1). This travelling phase was short compared to the diffusion time (~101 s) predicted using the diffusion constant of the agarose molecule. During the gelling phase, Na-alg solutions in both parts were solidified from the surface of the droplets (Fig. 3a) because of the diffusional permeation of Ca2+ ions into the droplet. The diffusion of agarose molecules into the gelled area was very slow compared to that in the non-gelled area; hence, it almost stopped at the gelating front (Fig. 3a). Finally, when all the Na-alg in the droplet had formed Ca-alg (Fig. 3a), the locations of the diffused agarose molecules were fixed. After the gelation of agarose by cooling and the dissolution of the Ca-alg gel, diffusionally expanded agarose gel particles were obtained (Fig. 3a (V)). Figure 3b shows confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) images of the agarose microparticles. The red-fluorescent region was generated by the diffusional spreading of agarose, which only occurred when the CaCl2 concentration was low (Fig. 3b, 0.5–2 M). When the CaCl2 concentration exceeded 2 M, diffusional spreading of agarose was not observed. Figure 3c shows the dependence of the diffusional spreading length xa (defined by Fig. 3a (V)) of agarose on the CaCl2 concentration. xa is observed to decrease as the CaCl2 concentration increases. As a result, the deformation was successfully controlled by manipulating the CaCl2 concentration. Figure 3d,e show CLSM images of the spherical 3D-MC microparticles produced with the diffusional flow of agarose at 1.5 M CaCl2 (left of each panel) and complex-shaped microparticles produced by the partial dissolution of the spherical particles (right of each panel): a mushroom-like shape (Fig. 3d) and a double-bladed propeller shape with a thick axis (Fig. 3e).
Next, we synthesized complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles using the deformation of microdroplets induced by the nonequilibrium-induced Marangoni microflow (Fig. 1a). The deformation scheme is shown in Fig. 4a. The red part included Solution-B and the green part included Solution-B with a surfactant (Tween 20) to decrease the surface tension of the green part compared to that of the red part. During the travelling phase, the surface of the droplet was deformed by the Marangoni flow. The required time for the Marangoni flow to attain equilibrium was estimated to be ~10−4 s (Supplementary Fig. S4), which was comparable to the duration of the traveling phase (~10−4 s). The red part (higher surface tension) was covered with the green part (lower surface tension) and the deformation was immediately stopped by surface gelation of the droplet in the gelling phase. Figure 4b shows CLSM images of Ca-alg two-faced (Janus) microparticles deformed by the Marangoni flow under various surface tension differences, Δγ, as tuned by manipulating the concentration of Tween 20 (CTween). The deformation ratio rdeform (as defined by Fig. 4a) increases with increasing CTween and reaches saturation at CTween ~0.5% (w/w) (Fig. 4c, blue circle). The saturation point was comparable to the saturation point of Δγ (Fig. 4c, magenta triangle). Figure 4d shows that rdeform was proportional to Δγ, suggesting that the deformation induced by Marangoni flow can be controlled by varying the difference in surface tension.
Here, the Marangoni-flow-induced deformation is theoretically investigated (see also Supplementary Fig. S4). The solutions are driven by the force induced by the surface tension difference f ~ Δγ/r, where r is the radius of the sol droplet. In the steady state, f is balanced by the shear stress τ = −η vx/r, where η and vx are the viscosity coefficient of the sol and the velocity of the Marangoni flow, respectively. Thus, we obtained the relation vx = −Δγ/η, hence vx ∝ Δγ. Because rdeform depends on the migration length of the front of the Marangoni flow, rdeform ∝ Δγ. These theoretical results agree with the experimental results. Figure 4e, f show CLSM images of the spherical 3D-MC microparticles deformed by the Marangoni flow (left of each panel) and the complex-shaped microparticles produced from the spherical precursors (right of each panel). Solution-A, Solution-B and Solution-C (a solution of Solution-A with Tween 20) were used and only the green parts of Solution-C were deformed by the Marangoni flow. Here, the complex-shaped microparticles having bowl-like shapes (Fig. 4e) and double-bladed propeller shapes with sharp edges (Fig. 4f) were synthesized.
Finally, we synthesized complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles using both diffusional and Marangoni flows. The scheme of deformation is summarized in Fig. 5a. Here, the red part contains Solution-B and the green part contains Solution-C. The concentration of the CaCl2 solution for solidification was 1.5 M. First, Solution-B was covered with Solution-C; the surface of the droplet was deformed because of the surface tension difference during the travelling phase. Then, in the gelling phase, the agarose molecules in Solution-C diffused into Solution-B while the Na-alg in both solutions were gelled from surface of the droplet. After the cooling of the agarose solution, spherical 3D-MC microparticles were obtained (CLSM image in Fig. 5b, left). Finally, the Ca-alg gel in all parts was dissolved by the addition of EDTA solution; complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles with deformed interior and surface structures were obtained (Fig. 5b, right).
Discussion
In this work, we developed a versatile method for generating complex-shaped 3D-MC microparticles. We successfully controlled the shapes of the microparticles using deformation from induced diffusional and Marangoni flows. During both deformation mechanisms, we captured instantaneous views of the nonequilibrium states of the microdroplets influenced by microflows at given times. We showed that the dominant control parameter for deformation using the diffusional flow was the gelling speed of the Na-Alg, which was controlled by varying the Ca2+ concentration (Fig. 3b,c and Supplementary Fig. S3); we also showed that the dominant control parameter for deformation using the Marangoni flow was the surface tension difference between the solutions, which was controlled by changing the concentration of the surfactant (Fig. 4d and Supplementary Fig. S4). These parameters directly controlled the microflow kinetics in the precursor microdroplets. The kinetically tuneable deformation in the respective travelling and gelling phases is greatly advantageous in this generation method. Because the microflow-induced deformations occur in different phases of the synthesis reaction, microparticles with both internal and surface deformations were successfully produced by the application of both induced flows. We found that the contours of the structures deformed by the diffusional flow were slightly blurred in comparison with the other structures (Figs 3b,d,e and 5b). We consider that the density of the agarose gel, originating from the front of the diffusional flow, was somewhat lower than that present in the other parts and was insufficient to maintain the embedded fluorescent nanobeads. In addition, the thin agarose films produced at the front of the flow were slightly damaged in the process of dissolving the Ca-alg gel, as shown in Figs 4e and 5b. We anticipate that these structural issues with the agarose gel may be solved by the use of other gels with higher cross-linking densities and degrees of robustness. Our method can be generally applied to various materials such as N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm), polyethylene(glycol)diacrylate (PEGDA) and collagens, but the following conditions are required to control the microparticle shapes accurately: (i) The gelling mechanisms of the two solutions should be different; (ii) The time scale of gelation should be comparable to that of diffusional flow to control the deformation by the diffusional flow; (iii) The time scale of the traveling phase should be comparable to that of the Marangoni flow to control the deformation by the Marangoni flow.
The method described here may be significant for the development of microparticle-based applications such as self-assembled materials1,2,3, self-propelled micromotors4,5,6,7, drug delivery systems8,9 and environmental engineering10. As an example, we have demonstrated the application of this method in designing self-propelled micromotors exhibiting controlled directional motions due to their asymmetric shapes (Supplementary Fig. S5). For further development, this method will contribute to the fabrication of various integrated systems of microparticles using functional materials such as pH-responsive DNA28,29, molecular memories30 and computers31. Such integrated functional complex-shaped microparticles will realize higher-order self-assembly based on specific interactions and computations by programmed DNA sequences, highly functional drug delivery systems and the development of autonomous molecular robots32,33 with sensing and information-processing functions. We believe that this synthesis method will promote the use of microparticle-based applications in several fields of science and technology.
Methods
Fabrication of centrifugal capillary-based microfluidic device
The capillary-based microfluidic device was composed of a glass capillary, a microtube and capillary holders made of polyacetal resin (Supplementary Fig. S6). Both the glass capillaries (World Precision Instruments, TST150-6, 3B120F-4 and 7B100F-6) and the microtube (BIO-BIK, 1.5 mL microtube CF-0150) were obtained commercially. The tip of the glass capillary was sharpened by a puller (NARISHIGE, PC-10) and the capillary orifice was tuned by a Microforge (NARISHIGE, MF-900). Using a MODERA MDX-40 (Roland DG), 2-mm-thick polyacetal resin plates were cut into circular plates and holes for the glass capillary and screw holes were drilled. The size of the central fixing hole varied depending on the thickness of the glass capillaries being used. The processed plates were assembled with screws (M2 × 1.5).
Compositions of Solution-A, -B and -C
Solution-A: a mixture of 2% (w/w) sodium alginate (Wako Pure Chemical Industries) and 1.5% (w/w) agarose (Sigma-Aldrich, Type IX-A, Ultra-low Gelling Temperature). Solution-B: 3% (w/w) sodium alginate solution. Solution-C: a mixture of 2% (w/w) sodium alginate, 1.5% (w/w) agarose and 0.1% (w/w) polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monolaurate (Tween 20) (Wako Pure Chemical Industries).
Fluorescent colouring of Solutions A–C
The 3D-MC microparticles shown in Figs 2, 3, 4 were coloured by fluorescent nanobeads; the compositions of each colour are as follows. Red: 0.1% (w/w) red-fluorescent nanobeads (Polysciences, 590 nm, #18719). Green: 0.1% (w/w) green-fluorescent nanobeads (Polysciences, 540 nm, #16662). Blue: 0.1% (w/w) blue-fluorescent nanobeads (Polysciences, 468 nm, #19774). Yellow: 0.05% (w/w) green-fluorescent nanobeads and 0.05% (w/w) red-fluorescent nanobeads.
Synthesis and observation of complex-shaped microparticles
Sodium alginate and agarose were dissolved in pure water (Milli-Q). To avoid the premature gelation of agarose, both solutions were mixed after being heated to 80 °C. These solutions were reheated to 80 °C before introduction into the glass capillary. Microparticles obtained using the capillary-based microfluidic device were immediately cooled to 4 °C and the agarose was solidified at 4 °C for 20 min. Subsequently, the microparticles were carefully washed with and soaked in pure water for approximately 1 h. Next, calcium alginate gels in the microparticles were dissolved by the addition of the EDTA solution with a final concentration of 0.25 M (Wako Pure Chemical Industries). These microparticles were observed using a fluorescence microscope (OLYMPUS, IX81) and a confocal laser scanning microscope (CLSM) (OLYMPUS, FV1000). In all experiments, a swing rotor centrifuge (HITECH, ATT 101) was used and the centrifugal duration was 3 min at ~4200 rpm (~1000×g).
Surface tension measurement
The surface tension of the sodium alginate solution containing Tween 20 was measured using the pendant-drop method34. We calculated the surface tension by analysing a photograph of the shape of a drop of the solution hanging from a pipette tip (WATSON, 122–703C) taken by a digital camera (Ricoh Company, R8).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Hayakawa, M. et al. Complex-shaped three-dimensional multi-compartmental microparticles generated by diffusional and Marangoni microflows in centrifugally discharged droplets. Sci. Rep. 6, 20793; doi: 10.1038/srep20793 (2016).
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Acknowledgements
We thank Prof. Shoji Takeuchi (The Univ. of Tokyo), Mr. Kazuki Maeda (Caltech), Dr. Masamune Morita and Ms. Haruka Sugiura (Tokyo Tech.) for helpful discussions. This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas “Molecular Robotics” (No.24104002) to M.T. from The Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), a Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (A) to M.T. (No.24680033), a Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Exploratory Research to M.T. and H.O. (No. 24651159) and to K.H.N. (No. 26610112), a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) to M.T., H.O. and K.H.N. (No. 26280097) and (S) to M.T. (No. 22220001) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS), Grant Program of The Sumitomo Foundation to K.H.N. (No. 131130) and supported by a JSPS fellowship for young scientists to K.H.N. (No. 23-1819) and to M.H. (No. 15J11385).
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M.H., H.O., K.H.N. and M.T. designed this study. M.H. performed the experiments. M.H., K.H.N. and M.T. made the theoretical model. M.H. and M.T. wrote the manuscript. M.H., H.O., K.H.N. and M.T. discussed the results and revised the manuscript.
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Hayakawa, M., Onoe, H., Nagai, K. et al. Complex-shaped three-dimensional multi-compartmental microparticles generated by diffusional and Marangoni microflows in centrifugally discharged droplets. Sci Rep 6, 20793 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20793
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep20793
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