Synthesis of microparticles by microfluidic emulsification for water treatmentTools Lian, Zheng (2020) Synthesis of microparticles by microfluidic emulsification for water treatment. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractMicrofluidics is characterised by the properties such as the minute amount of consumed materials, fast analytical and responding performances, and integration of multiple functions in the same system. Droplet microfluidic technologies have proliferated rapidly in recent years, with broad applications promoted in many industrial and biomedical fields. The microfluidic devices favour the fabrication of microparticles with versatile control over the size, morphology and compositions in a facile and economical way by manipulating the flow rates and materials of the dispersed and continuous phases. Modified off-the-shelf needle-based microfluidic devices were developed in this research to form oil-in-water (O/W) single emulsion template and fabricate various types of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microparticles, including pristine PDMS microparticles (PDMS-P), two types of porous PDMS microparticles templated from tetrachloromethane (CCl4) and white granulated sugars (PDMS-C and PDMS-S, respectively), PDMS microparticles incorporating multiple-walled carbon nanotubes (PDMS-M), titanium dioxide (PDMS-T) and multiple-walled carbon nanotubes/titanium dioxide nanocomposites (PDMS-MWCNTs/TiO2).
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