Tailored Fluorosurfactants through Controlled/Living Radical Polymerization for Highly Stable Microfluidic Droplet Generation

Author:

Li Xiangke1,Tang Shi‐Yang2,Zhang Yang3,Zhu Jiayuan1,Forgham Helen1,Zhao Chun‐Xia14,Zhang Cheng1,Davis Thomas P.1,Qiao Ruirui1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Australian Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology The University of Queensland Brisbane, Queensland 4072 Australia

2. School of Electronics and Computer Science University of Southampton Southampton SO17 1BJ UK

3. School of Engineering, Faculty of Science and Engineering Macquarie University Sydney, NSW 2109 Australia

4. School of Chemical Engineering and Advanced Materials The University of Adelaide Adelaide, SA 5005 Australia

Abstract

AbstractDroplet‐based microfluidics represents a disruptive technology in the field of chemistry and biology through the generation and manipulation of sub‐microlitre droplets. To avoid droplet coalescence, fluoropolymer‐based surfactants are commonly used to reduce the interfacial tension between two immiscible phases to stabilize droplet interfaces. However, the conventional preparation of fluorosurfactants involves multiple steps of conjugation reactions between fluorinated and hydrophilic segments to form multiple‐block copolymers. In addition, synthesis of customized surfactants with tailored properties is challenging due to the complex synthesis process. Here, we report a highly efficient synthetic method that utilizes living radical polymerization (LRP) to produce fluorosurfactants with tailored functionalities. Compared to the commercialized surfactant, our surfactants outperform in thermal cycling for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing, and exhibit exceptional biocompatibility for cell and yeast culturing in a double‐emulsion system. This breakthrough synthetic approach has the potential to revolutionize the field of droplet‐based microfluidics by enabling the development of novel designs that generate droplets with superior stability and functionality for a wide range of applications.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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