posted on 2014-11-11, 00:00authored byIngmar Polenz, Sujit S. Datta, David A. Weitz
We
use microfluidics to continuously produce monodisperse polyurea
microcapsules (PUMCs) having either aqueous or nonaqueous cores. The
microcapsule shells are formed by the reaction between an isocyanate,
dissolved in oil, and an amine, dissolved in water, at the surface
of oil-in-water or water-in-oil drops immediately as they are formed.
Different microcapsule morphologies can be generated using our approach.
The thickness of the microcapsule shell increases with an increase
in the amine solubility in the oil; this finding provides a simple
mechanism by which the PUMC shell thickness can be controlled.