Title :
Droplet Microfluidics to Prepare Magnetic Polymer Vesicles and to Confine the Heat in Magnetic Hyperthermia
Author :
Habault, Damien ; Déry, Alexandre ; Leng, Jacques ; Lecommandoux, Sébastien ; Meins, Jean-François Le ; Sandre, Olivier
Author_Institution :
LCPO, Univ. de Bordeaux, Pessac, France
Abstract :
In this work, we present two types of microfluidic chips involving magnetic nanoparticles dispersed in cyclohexane with oleic acid. In the first case, the hydrophobically coated nanoparticles are self-assembled with an amphiphilic diblock copolymer by a double-emulsion process in order to prepare giant magnetic vesicles (polymersomes) in one step and at a high throughput. It was shown in literature that such diblock copolymer W/O/W emulsion droplets can evolve into polymersomes made of a thin (nanometric) magnetic membrane through a dewetting transition of the oil phase from the aqueous internal cores usually leading to “acorn-like” structures (polymer excess) sticking to the membranes. To address this issue and greatly speed up the process, the solvent removal by evaporation was replaced by a “shearing-off” of the vesicles in a simple poly(dimethylsiloxane) chip designed to exert a balance between a magnetic gradient and viscous shear. In the second example, a simple oil-in-oil emulsion chip is used to obtain regular trains of magnetic droplets that circulate inside an inductor coil producing a radio-frequency magnetic field. We evidence that the heat produced by magnetic hyperthermia can be converted into a temperature rise even at the scale of nL droplets. The results are compared to heat transfer models in two limiting cases: adiabatic vs. dissipative. The aim is to decipher the delicate puzzle about the minimum size required for a tumor “phantom” to be heated by radio-frequency hyperthermia in a general scope of anticancer therapy.
Keywords :
cancer; drops; emulsions; hyperthermia; magnetic particles; magnetic thin films; microfluidics; nanofabrication; nanoparticles; organic compounds; patient treatment; phantoms; polymer blends; self-assembly; tumours; acorn like structures; amphiphilic diblock copolymer; anticancer therapy; cyclohexane; dewetting transition; diblock copolymer W-O-W emulsion droplets; dispersed magnetic nanoparticles; double emulsion process; droplet microfluidics; giant magnetic vesicles; heat confinement; hydrophobically coated nanoparticles; inductor coil; magnetic hyperthermia; magnetic polymer vesicle preparation; microfluidic chips; oil in oil emulsion chip; oleic acid; poly(dimethylsiloxane) chip; polymersomes; radiofrequency hyperthermia; radiofrequency magnetic field; self assembly; thin nanometric magnetic membrane; tumor phantom; Magnetic confinement; Magnetic domains; Magnetic resonance imaging; Perpendicular magnetic anisotropy; Polymers; Soft magnetic materials; Heat transfer; magnetic hyperthermia; magnetophoresis; microfluidics; self-assembly; soft magnetic materials;
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.2012.2221688