4.8 Article

High-Throughput Microfluidic Production of Droplets and Hydrogel Microspheres through Monolithically Integrated Microchannel Plates

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 36, Pages 13586-13595

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.3c02250

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This paper presents a highly effective microfluidic emulsion system using an integrated MCP for high-throughput production of monodisperse droplets. The system has been validated for various applications, including hydrogel microsphere preparation and absolute quantification of genes. It offers easy fabrication, robust performance, and simple operation, making it suitable for droplet-based assays and tissue engineering applications.
In this paper, we present a highly effective microfluidic emulsion system using an integrated microchannel plate (MCP), a porous glass membrane that is readily available and densely packs millions of through-microchannels, for high-throughput production of monodisperse droplets. The physical controls of droplet formation, including viscosity, flow rate, and pore size, have been extensively explored for optimum emulsification conditions. The performance of the device has been validated where monodisperse droplets with a narrow coefficient of variance (<5%) can be achieved at a dispersed phase flux of 3 mL h(-1) from a piece of 4 x 4 mm(2) MCP. The average droplet size is two times the nominal membrane pore diameter and thus can be easily controlled by choosing the appropriate membrane type. The preparation of hydrogel microspheres has also been demonstrated with a high throughput of 1.5 x 10(6) particles min(-1). These microspheres with a uniform size range and rough surface morphology provide suitable bioenvironments and serve as ideal carriers for cell culture. Mouse fibroblasts are shown to be cultured on these 3D scaffolds with an average cell viability of over 96%. The cell attachment rate can reach up to 112 +/- 7% in 24 h and the proliferation ability increases with the number of culture days. Furthermore, the device has been applied in the droplet digital polymerase chain reaction for absolute quantification of lung cancer-related PLAU genes. The detection limit achieved was noted to be 0.5 copies/mu L with a dynamic range of 10(5) ranging from 1 x 10(2) to 1 x 10(6) copies/mu L. Given the easy fabrication, robust performance, and simple operation, the emulsion system sets the stage for the laboratory's droplet-based assays and applications in tissue engineering.

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