Microsystems & Nanoengineering (Jul 2023)

Gas-assisted microfluidic step-emulsification for generating micron- and submicron-sized droplets

  • Biao Huang,
  • Xinjin Ge,
  • Boris Y. Rubinstein,
  • Xianchun Chen,
  • Lu Wang,
  • Huiying Xie,
  • Alexander M. Leshansky,
  • Zhenzhen Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-023-00558-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Micron- and submicron-sized droplets have extensive applications in biomedical diagnosis and drug delivery. Moreover, accurate high-throughput analysis requires a uniform droplet size distribution and high production rates. Although the previously reported microfluidic coflow step-emulsification method can be used to generate highly monodispersed droplets, the droplet diameter (d) is constrained by the microchannel height (b), $$d\gtrsim 3b$$ d ≳ 3 b , while the production rate is limited by the maximum capillary number of the step-emulsification regime, impeding emulsification of highly viscous liquids. In this paper, we report a novel, gas-assisted coflow step-emulsification method, where air serves as the innermost phase of a precursor hollow-core air/oil/water emulsion. Air gradually diffuses out, producing oil droplets. The size of the hollow-core droplets and the ultrathin oil layer thickness both follow the scaling laws of triphasic step-emulsification. The minimal droplet size attains $$d\approx 1.7b$$ d ≈ 1.7 b , inaccessible in standard all-liquid biphasic step-emulsification. The production rate per single channel is an order-of-magnitude higher than that in the standard all-liquid biphasic step-emulsification and is also superior to alternative emulsification methods. Due to low gas viscosity, the method can also be used to generate micron- and submicron-sized droplets of high-viscosity fluids, while the inert nature of the auxiliary gas offers high versatility.