Title :
Impact Studies of High-Speed Micro-Particles Following Biolistic Delivery
Author_Institution :
Oxford Univ., Oxford
Abstract :
The powdered injection system is a novel biomedical device for needle-free adminstration of DNA vaccines. One system, call the Venturi device, uses the venturi effect to entrain DNA-coated micron gold particles into an established quasi-steady supersonic helium jet flow and accelerate them into an appropriate momentum in order to penetrate the outer layer of the skin or mucosal tissue to achieve a biological effect. In this paper, computational fluid dynamics is utilized to simulate the complete operation of a prototype Venturi system. The key features of the gas dynamics and gas-particle interactions are presented. In particular, the mechanism for the particle entrainment is explored. The overall capability of the Venturi system to deliver the particles into modelled targets is discussed. The statistical analysis shows that a mean impact velocity of 695 m/s is achieved for representative gold particles (1.8 in diameter), with a penetration depth of 29.8 for epidermal DNA delivery.
Keywords :
DNA; biological fluid dynamics; computational fluid dynamics; drug delivery systems; drugs; gold; jets; molecular biophysics; powders; skin; statistical analysis; supersonic flow; Au - Element; DNA vaccines; DNA-coated micron gold particles; Venturi device; biolistic delivery; biological effect.; biomedical device; computational fluid dynamics; depth 29.8 mum; epidermal DNA delivery; gas dynamics; gas-particle interactions; high-speed microparticles; mean impact velocity; mucosal tissue; needle-free vaccine adminstration; powdered injection system; quasisteady supersonic helium jet flow; size 1.8 mum; skin; statistical analysis; velocity 695 m/s; venturi effect; Acceleration; Biological system modeling; Biological tissues; Computational fluid dynamics; Computational modeling; DNA; Gold; Helium; Skin; Vaccines; Biolistic; impact; micro-particle; penetration; supersonic jet; Biolistics; Computer Simulation; Computer-Aided Design; Equipment Design; Equipment Failure Analysis; Microspheres; Models, Biological; Skin Physiology;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2007.891165