4.7 Article

Deposition of non-porous calcium phosphate shells onto liquid filled microcapsules

Journal

JOURNAL OF COLLOID AND INTERFACE SCIENCE
Volume 609, Issue -, Pages 575-583

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcis.2021.11.062

Keywords

Encapsulation; Calcium phosphate; Delivery vehicle; Microcapsules

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Efficient encapsulation of small molecule active ingredients has been a challenge in various commercial applications. A new method using thin mineral shells to protect active ingredients was developed. The majority of the microcapsules formed a non-porous protective shell, with only the defective ones releasing small concentrations of the core material.
The efficient encapsulation of small molecule active ingredients has been a challenge for many decades across many commercial applications. Recently, successful attempts to address this issue have included deposition of thin metal shells onto liquid filled polymer microcapsules or emulsion droplets to provide an impermeable barrier to diffusion. In this work we have developed a novel method to protect small molecule active ingredients by deposition of thin mineral shells. Platinum nanoparticles are used to catalyse and direct growth of a calcium phosphate shell onto liquid filled polymer microcapsules under various reaction conditions. Findings indicate that a non-porous protective shell is formed on the majority of the microcapsule population, with small concentrations of the core material being released only from those microcapsules with defects, over a 7 days period, when conducting forced release studies into a solvent for the core oil. The resulting microcapsules show no significant cell toxicity when exposed to HEK 293 cells for 72 h. (c) 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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