Issue 17, 2010

Materials for microencapsulation: what toroidal particles (“doughnuts”) can do better than spherical beads

Abstract

The vast majority of matrices used in microencapsulation are spherical. This geometry has some drawbacks due to its low surface/volume ratio: for example the difficult diffusion of oxygen to the bulk of a cell-containing microbead may lead to hypoxia or necrosis of the encapsulated cells. Here we focused on toroidal microparticle (“doughnuts”); these structures have a higher surface area than spherical beads and dispersed objects will experience a lower average distance from the surface. The toroidal morphology is the result of the flattening of water drops impacting on a liquid surface, and is then “quenched” by the occurrence of a rapid gelation due to polyelectrolyte complexation. We have produced toroidal microparticles using chitosan with an appropriately low molecular weight in combination with triphosphate (TPP), optimizing the conditions of pH and concentration of the two components. We also present here an evaluation of the process used for chitosan depolymerisation and of the cytotoxicity of the resulting polymers, which marginally decreases with decreasing molecular weight.

Under the conditions adopted, the “doughnuts” result more densely cross-linked than spherical microparticles and show a considerably improved physical stability.

Graphical abstract: Materials for microencapsulation: what toroidal particles (“doughnuts”) can do better than spherical beads

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Mar 2010
Accepted
07 May 2010
First published
14 Jun 2010

Soft Matter, 2010,6, 4070-4083

Materials for microencapsulation: what toroidal particles (“doughnuts”) can do better than spherical beads

S. Ungphaiboon, D. Attia, G. Gomez d'Ayala, P. Sansongsak, F. Cellesi and N. Tirelli, Soft Matter, 2010, 6, 4070 DOI: 10.1039/C0SM00150C

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