Adam S.
Opalski
,
Karol
Makuch
,
Yu-Kai
Lai
,
Ladislav
Derzsi
and
Piotr
Garstecki
*
Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland. E-mail: garst@ichf.edu.pl
First published on 21st February 2019
Microfluidic step emulsification passively produces highly monodisperse droplets and can be easily parallelized for high throughput emulsion production. The two main techniques used for step emulsification are: i) edge-based droplet generation (EDGE), where droplets are formed in a single, very wide and shallow nozzle, and ii) microchannel emulsification (MCE), where droplets are formed in many separated narrow nozzles. These techniques differ in modes of droplet formation that influence the throughput and monodispersity of produced emulsions. Here we report a systematic study of novel grooved step emulsifying geometries, a hybrid of MCE and EDGE architectures. We introduce partitions of different heights to a wide (EDGE-like) slit to establish optimal geometries for high-throughput droplet production. We demonstrate that the volume and monodispersity of the produced emulsion can be tuned solely by changing the height of these partitions. We show that the spacing of the partitions influences the size of the produced droplets, but not the population monodispersity. We also determine the moment of transition between two distinct droplet generation modes as a function of the geometrical parameters of the nozzle. The optimized grooved geometry appears to combine the advantages of both MCE and EDGE, i.e. spatial localization of droplet forming units (DFUs), high-throughput formation of tightly monodisperse droplets from parallel DFUs, and low sensitivity to variation in the flow rate of the dispersed phase. As a proof-of-concept we show grooved devices that for a 260-fold increase of flow rate produce droplets with volume increased by just 75%, as compared to 91% increase in volume over a 180-fold increase of flow rate of the dispersed phase in MCE devices. We also present the optimum microfluidic device geometry that almost doubles the throughput of an MCE device in the generation of nanoliter droplets.
Emulsions, metastable systems of droplets dispersed in an immiscible fluid, are of high interest to many industries, especially cosmetic, food and pharmaceutical companies.1–4 The key requirements for industrial-scale emulsifiers are minimal cost of their operation and the quality of the emulsion. Droplet monodispersity is a crucial parameter of droplet libraries, because highly monodisperse droplet populations are not only less prone to degradation, via e.g. Ostwald ripening,5 but also allow maintaining of the reproducibility of the experiments on multiple separate compartments.6–8
A number of emulsification techniques, such as rotor–stator, high pressure or ultrasonic homogenization, are used to generate emulsions on an industrial scale. While these techniques allow high throughput of the process, the size distribution of the emulsion is rather high (CV > 20%). Droplet microfluidics – an interdisciplinary field of science that deals with controlled manipulation of discrete portions of fluids suspended in immiscible fluids in microdevices8,9 – is a powerful tool to produce highly monodisperse emulsions containing one to trillions of pico- or nanoliter droplets.10,11 Droplet microfluidics allows minimization of the time and resources required to perform typical laboratory assays when compared to batch methods.9,12
Encapsulation of various objects in droplets provided the possibility to use droplet microfluidic systems in high-throughput screening, both in research and industry. Biological research is a staple application field of droplet systems: starting from digital assays (e.g. droplet digital PCR13), through drug-discovery research (e.g. determination of effective antibiotic treatments14) to performing operations on single cells (e.g. high-throughput single cell genome sequencing15). The high-throughput capabilities of droplet microfluidics have not only biological research benefits, but have also found use in industrial applications such as production of a variety of materials, including functional materials (e.g. biodegradable, magnetically or temperature-responsive microparticles16) and monodisperse micro- and nanoparticles,17 as well as capsules that can be loaded with various active ingredients.18
From the point of view of how the droplets are generated, droplet microfluidic devices can be generally divided into active and passive.7 In active devices, both the droplets and the continuous phases are continuously pressed through a droplet generation junction (e.g. a T-junction19 or a flow-focusing junction20). The main feature of the active droplet generators is that the volume of the droplets depends on the flow rates of both phases.21,22 While this allows tuning of the droplet volume and parallelized active systems can be engineered to generate emulsions at kg h−1 rates, the dependence of the droplet volume on the flow rates is a disadvantage in mass production. Even small fluctuations in the flow rates or in the distribution of resistance in the channels may spoil the otherwise highly monodisperse character of the emulsion.23 Passive devices are primarily dependent on the geometry of the droplet generating units and allow large variation of the flow rate of the dispersed phase, with minimum impact on the droplet volumes.24,25
For less stringent requirements on the input flow and higher robustness, passive emulsification methods are fundamentally better suited for mass production. Step emulsification is a popular and widely used passive emulsification method due to its simplicity of fabrication and parallelization.26 Recently, a lot of effort has been put into developing new geometrical variants of step emulsification devices (so-called step emulsifiers) that may increase the throughput of droplet formation. Some solutions change the geometry of a single step emulsifier in order to decouple the dependency of the droplet size from the flow rate of the droplet phase.25,27 Another approach is to parallelize a large number of step emulsifiers in one microfluidic device, as shown e.g. in the ‘millipede’ device28 or in an up-scaled microchannel emulsifier.29
Two well-known passive emulsification methods are microchannel emulsification (MCE)30 and edge-based droplet generation (EDGE),31,32 both shown in Fig. 1. MCE employs one up to thousands of independent droplet forming units (DFUs), microchannels with a rectangular cross-section that enter the deep outer phase reservoir.25,29,33 The aspect ratio of the channel width to height is relatively small, in the order of ∼1–10.29 DFU positions are fixed, as microchannels are separated by solid walls. Each DFU operates independently and the process is highly reproducible. MCE produces highly monodisperse emulsions for low droplet phase flow rates. When a critical flow rate is reached, the droplet size and dispersion sharply rise.33–35 The EDGE geometry features a single, wide channel with a shallow slit, which enters the deep reservoir filled with the continuous phase. The emulsifying channel has a high aspect ratio of width to height, as it can exceed 100.31 The wide channel results in a wide channel–reservoir junction, along which the droplet phase splits into droplets in multiple places (DFUs). An EDGE system self-tunes the number and position of the DFUs and allows for reaching higher flow rates than MCE systems.36 Constant self-adjustment of the positions of the DFUs dynamically changes the conditions during the droplet formation process. Thus, the polydispersity of produced droplet populations is higher than that in MCE devices.7
In this paper we investigate the transition between two well-established step emulsification techniques: MCE and EDGE. To the best of our knowledge, no work has been previously undertaken to explain why two step emulsifying techniques yield droplets in different modes, where the transition point between those modes is observed, and what the optimal wide step emulsification geometry is. We identify the source of the transition between the two modes in the geometry of the emulsifying slit. Testing a wide range of geometrical variants allowed us to design and characterize a new type of geometry: the grooved step emulsifier (Fig. 1). This architecture combines the advantages of EDGE and MCE, i.e. producing droplets at a high throughput with a narrow size distribution. Moreover, grooved devices show lower dependence on the flow rate than the compared MCE and EDGE geometries. The principles of droplet formation and sensitivity to the flow rate are hardwired in the geometry of the devices. The grooved geometry allows fine tuning of the interplay between the emulsion monodispersity, size, and device throughput at the level of device fabrication. As a result, we deliver devices that produce monodisperse emulsions of known volume independent of the flow rate of the to-be-dispersed phase.
We chose two geometrical parameters to scan: i) the partition to groove ratio, , and ii) distance between grooves, (for more details see the ESI†). These parameters offer insight into the influence of the height and spacing of the grooves and the height of partitions between them on droplet formation. Fluid parameters such as densities, viscosities, interfacial tension, and flow rate enter hydrodynamic equations through four dimensionless independent parameters: density ratio ρ, viscosity ratio λ, bond (Eötvös) number Bo, and capillary number Ca:
Microfluidic experiments are performed for a small bond number – in our case Bo ≈ 0.002. It means that the emulsification process is governed by surface tension, not gravity. As a consequence we did not scan fluid densities.
The capillary number defines the ratio of viscous to interfacial forces. It can be used to determine the mode of droplet formation, whether they are produced in the dripping or jetting regime. The value of Ca for which the regime changes is called the critical capillary number (Cacr).35 Since the interfacial tension, viscosity and flow rate are part of the capillary number, therefore scanning over one of these parameters is equivalent to scanning all of them. This is why the scan of the devices over the flow rate of the to-be-dispersed phase is equivalent to the scan over the interfacial tension and viscosity of the continuous phase (for other parameters fixed). In the ESI,† we also included a test of fluids of different viscosities, confirming our assumptions (see Fig. S1†).
In our experiments, we used a range of devices with different heights of partitions. We investigated narrow devices (step width w = 1.1 mm) that produced one droplet at a time and wide devices (step width w = 15 mm) that featured multiple DFUs. The height (H) and width (wg) of the grooves were kept constant at 100 and 120 μm, respectively. The partition height (h) and width (Lg) varied across experiments.
In the second case, for devices with PGR > 0.5, the droplet phase plug is not confined to the groove but spreads onto the partitions. We called this second mode a ‘spilt-groove’ droplet generation mode (see Fig. 2C). In the in-groove mode, the volume of the generated droplet is more affected by the volumetric flow rate than in the spilt-groove mode – for PGR = 0.76 the volume of the produced droplets is almost constant for the investigated flow rates (see Fig. 2A).
Fig. 3 Droplet size (A and B) and droplet dispersion reported as the CV of the droplet volume (C and D) as a function of the flow rate of the droplet phase for devices with Lg = 0.75 mm. Data for other devices can be found in the ESI† (Fig. S1 and S2). |
Monodispersity is measured by the coefficient of variation of droplet population sizes, CV (CV = SDsize/dsize × 100%, where SDsize is the standard deviation of the droplet size and dsize is the mean of the droplet size, either volume or diameter; CVdiameter = 1% corresponds to CVvolume = 3%). Devices with PGR = 0–0.3 exhibited a very wide range of flow rates at which the CVvolume was <10% (CVdiameter < 3.3%), with a sharp increase of the polydispersity when reaching a certain threshold, around 1000 μL min−1 (see Fig. 3 and ESI† Fig. S2 and S3). For devices with PGR = 0.5–1.0, the polydispersity rapidly increased at much smaller flow rates than those with small PGRs (around 500 μL min−1) and for the highest tested flow rates large values were reached, up to CVvolume = 300% (see Fig. 3 and the ESI†).
The grooves not only affect the size and dispersion of the generated droplets, but also alter the dependence of the droplet size on the change of the flow rate. For PGR < 0.5, the droplet size changes with the flow rate much less than that for PGR > 0.5. Devices with PGR = 0.2 produce the smallest droplets, with the smallest monodispersity, and are the most resistant to variation in the flow rate for almost the whole range of the volumetric flow which we investigated.
Access of the continuous phase to the necking region is crucial for the droplet formation process. Increasing the access of the continuous phase and fixing the position of the necking region can be realized by adding side channels that deliver the continuous phase to the necking zone.25,27 This leads to increased stability of the droplet size against variation of the flow rate over a wide range.25 Here, we show that partitions of appropriate height may serve as bypasses and that their presence improves the performance of step emulsifiers.
To optimize the emulsifier parameters we systematically screened the geometries with varying partition dimensions. We observed two behaviors of the droplet phase stream which are associated with the geometry of the device. For small PGR values (<0.5), the dispersed phase prefers to stay in the grooved area, while for larger PGR values (>0.5) the droplet phase spreads over partitions (in detail in Fig. 2D). By calculating the Laplace pressures at the interface in the equilibrium configuration, we explained the reason for the transition as follows.
ΔPside < ΔPfront |
Thus, the condition of spreading can be defined as
For wg ≈ H, the condition for the droplet spreading out of the groove becomes
h > H/2, |
As mentioned, the presence of the continuous phase next to the neck of a forming droplet facilitates droplet pinch-off and formation of highly monodisperse droplet populations. Hence, the geometrical structures facilitating the contact of the neck of the droplet phase with the continuous phase promote the monodispersity of the produced droplets by influencing the hydrodynamics of the droplet formation process. Depending on the PGR, partitions of our geometries may act as: i) bypasses constantly supplying the outer phase to the necking point for the in-groove (MCE-like) mode, or ii) storage rooms for more droplet phase to accumulate before each droplet formation process for the spilt (EDGE-like) mode. That is why for the in-groove mode, the produced droplets were more monodisperse and smaller than emulsions from devices operating in the spilt-mode.
Production of large droplets (∼100 nL for H = 100 um) can be carried out by both EDGE and grooved emulsifiers (PGR = 0.3, Lg = 0.75 mm). The grooved device outperforms EDGE in terms of the operational flow rate (53 μL min−1 mm−1 for grooved, 13 μL min−1 mm−1 for EDGE) and the frequency of droplet production (30 Hz mm−1 for grooved, 4 Hz mm−1 for EDGE).
The throughput of droplet generation is a function of multiple parameters, the most fundamental of which is the geometry of the junctions and the connections between them.24 The presented grooved design features parallelized step emulsifying DFUs that rely on the geometry of the microchannels rather than on actuating the flow rates of the liquids. We provide insight into the relationship between the geometry of the DFU and the produced emulsions. Application of our findings allows the throughput of emulsification to be increased with respect to the known geometries, such as MCE and EDGE. We directly compare our geometry with state-of-the-art emulsifiers (grooved devices compared with EDGE and MCE devices, see Fig. 6).
We obtained a higher throughput of droplet production (e.g. grooved: up to 87 μL min−1 mm−1, MCE: up to 50 μL min−1 mm−1 for 25 nL droplets), a higher frequency of droplet generation (e.g. grooved: up to 50 Hz mm−1, MCE: up to 30 Hz mm−1 for 25 nL droplets) and a lower sensitivity of droplet volumes to changes in flow rates (e.g. grooved: 75% increase of droplet volume with a 260-fold increase of flow rate, MCE: 91% increase in volume for a 180-fold increase of flow rate, EDGE: the volume decreased by 12% for a 40-fold increase of flow rate, above which the volume rose sharply). Thus, we provide guidelines on how to design parallelized passive emulsification systems in order to maximize the throughput of desired emulsion production.
While in this paper we focus on passive high-throughput methods of droplet production, it is important to stress that progress has been made in the development of active methods. For instance, using a novel and very complex fabrication method it is possible to obtain a microfluidic device with over 10000 active droplet generators operating at extremely high pressures.11 It allows for impressive high-throughput emulsion production (>trillions of droplets per hour), higher than that in currently existing grooved devices. However, besides the complex fabrication and need to actuate the flows, the device requires the use of a considerable excess amount of the continuous phase, unlike in passive droplet production methods. Thus, we expect that both active and passive methods will undergo further optimization and find their select uses, also in industry.
If there are no substantial changes in the total hydrodynamic resistance of the supplying tubing and microfluidic chip (e.g. if they clog or fill up with the produced emulsion) then both ways are equivalent. Small pressure fluctuations are caused by the droplet formation process. When the curvature of the interface inside a chip changes, the Laplace pressure changes as well. As a result in constant pressure mode, there appear fluctuations of the flow rate. As reported for EDGE, they are negligible and do not influence the device operation.31 Such fluctuations can be eliminated by taking larger hydrodynamic resistance of the supplying tubing. What is more, as stated before, the passive microfluidic device can be placed in an unconfined reservoir filled with the continuous phase, which eliminates the influence of newly formed droplets on hydrodynamic resistance. Keeping this in mind, it is up to the researcher to pick the fluid supply method for the grooved step emulsifier.
The droplet volume scales with the cube of the DFU height;28 thus to produce 1 nL droplets (reduce the volume by 25 times) the approximate geometrical parameters would need to be downscaled by times. The suggested dimensions would be: h ∼ 10 μm, H ∼ 30 μm, wg ∼ 40 μm, and Lg ∼ 0.17 mm. Since the maximum injection rate scales with h2, we estimate Qmax/w to be of the order μL min−1 mm−1.28 The single DFU width is 0.174 mm (wg + Lg), yielding 5.71 DFUs per mm. The theoretical throughput of 1 nL droplet production from the grooved device is around 80 μL h−1 per DFU.
The state-of-the-art ‘millipede’ device produces droplets at 150 mL h−1 in 550 DFUs, (roughly 275 μL h−1 per single DFU), which is 3 times the rate per groove in our device.28 At the same time, however, the footprint of the millipede nozzle is 3 times larger than the footprint of the DFU in the grooved device (approximately 0.2 mm2 and 0.06 mm2, respectively). Thus, the two designs offer a similar throughput per surface area of the chip, since the DFUs in the grooved system can be placed 3 times denser than in the millipede system.
In our study we established optimal geometries for high-throughput droplet formation using paralleled step emulsifying units, DFUs. The choice of appropriate emulsifier depends on the volume of the droplet that we want to obtain. The optimal geometry features an intermediate ratio of PGR ∼0.2–0.3 for grooves spaced by 4–6.25 times the width of a groove (0.5 or 0.75 mm for 120 μm wide grooves). The groove geometry appears to combine the advantages of both MCE and EDGE, i.e. spatial localization of DFUs, high-throughput formation of tightly monodisperse droplets from parallel DFUs, and low sensitivity to variation in the flow rate.
The presented microsystems share the benefits of previously shown passive droplet generation systems, such as no need for control over the continuous phase flow, low consumption of the outer phase and production of highly monodisperse droplets. Our study shows how altering the geometry of the microfluidic nozzles and the connection between them can substantially change the throughput of the emulsification process and the size distribution of the produced emulsion. We propose a way to further optimize the throughput of existing highly parallel passive systems in order to produce vast amounts of monodisperse emulsions.
The droplet production schemes shown in this study might find use in any field of industry dealing with monodisperse emulsions or particles.8 As the findings that we report here are scale-free, the optimum geometry can in principle be scaled down to produce picoliter droplets. Consequently, the variants of the presented device would be extremely useful for biological-assay studies, such as single molecule or single cell studies requiring ultra-high throughput of encapsulation and investigation, coupled with the need for monodispersity and stability (e.g. single cell genome sequencing15 or expression profiling43).
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c8lc01096j |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019 |