4.8 Article

Fluorinated Pickering Emulsions Impede Interfacial Transport and Form Rigid Interface for the Growth of Anchorage-Dependent Cells

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 6, Issue 23, Pages 21446-21453

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am506443e

Keywords

Pickering emulsion; droplet microfluidics; nanoparticles; amphiphilicity; biocompatibility

Funding

  1. Stanford Nano Shared Facilities Bio/Medical Mini Seed Grant
  2. Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment
  3. 3M Untenured Faculty Award

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This study describes the design and synthesis of amphiphilic silica nanoparticles for the stabilization of aqueous drops in fluorinated oils for applications in droplet microfluidics. The success of droplet microfluidics has thus far relied on one type of surfactant for the stabilization of drops. However, surfactants are known to have two key limitations: (1) interdrop molecular transport leads to cross-contamination of droplet contents, and (2) the incompatibility with the growth of adherent mammalian cells as the liquid-liquid interface is too soft for cell adhesion. The use of nanoparticles as emulsifiers overcomes these two limitations. Particles are effective in mitigating undesirable interdrop molecular transport as they are irreversibly adsorbed to the liquid-liquid interface. They do not form micelles as surfactants do, and thus, a major pathway for interdrop transport is eliminated. In addition, particles at the droplet interface provide a rigid solid-like interface to which cells could adhere and spread, and are thus compatible with the proliferation of adherent mammalian cells such as fibroblasts and breast cancer cells. The particles described in this work can enable new applications for high-fidelity assays and for the culture of anchorage-dependent cells in droplet microfluidics, and they have the potential to become a competitive alternative to current surfactant systems for the stabilization of drops critical for the success of the technology.

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