Multi-step synthesis of nanoparticles performed on millisecond time scale in a microfluidic droplet-based system
Abstract
This paper reports a plug-based, microfluidic method for performing multi-step chemical reactions with millisecond time-control. It builds upon a previously reported method where aqueous reagents were injected into a flow of immiscible fluid (fluorocarbons) (H. Song et al., Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 2003, 42, 768). The aqueous reagents formed plugs – droplets surrounded and transported by the immiscible fluid. Winding channels rapidly mixed the reagents in droplets. This paper shows that further stages of the reaction could be initiated by flowing additional reagent streams directly into the droplets of initial reaction mixture. The conditions necessary for an aqueous stream to merge with aqueous droplets were characterized. The Capillary number could be used to predict the behavior of the two-phase flow at the merging junction. By transporting solid reaction products in droplets, the products were kept from aggregating on the walls of the microchannels. To demonstrate the utility of this microfluidic method it was used to synthesize colloidal CdS and CdS/CdSe core-shell nanoparticles.
Additional Information
© Royal Society of Chemistry 2004. Received 4th March 2004, Accepted 12th May 2004. First published on the web 5th July 2004. This work was supported by the Beckman Young Investigator Program and Chicago MRSEC funded by NSF. At The University of Chicago, work was performed at the MRSEC microfluidic facility. JDT is a Beckman Scholar. We thank David Sharoyan and Bo Zheng for helpful discussions and preliminary experiments. We thank Cory J. Gerdts and Helen Song for performing photolithography at MAL of the UIC. Lab on a Chip special issue: The Science and Application of Droplets in Microfluidic DevicesAttached Files
Published - Ismagilov_LOC_2004_4_316_Shestopalov_Mulitstep_synthesis_nanoparticles_ms_timescale_ufl_droplet_system.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 40869
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20130821-160731532
- Beckman Young Investigator award
- NSF
- Created
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2013-08-28Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-10Created from EPrint's last_modified field