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Bright conjugated polymer nanoparticles containing a biodegradable shell produced at high yields and with tuneable optical properties by a scalable microfluidic device

Bright conjugated polymer nanoparticles containing a biodegradable shell produced at high yields and with tuneable optical properties by a scalable microfluidic device
Bright conjugated polymer nanoparticles containing a biodegradable shell produced at high yields and with tuneable optical properties by a scalable microfluidic device
This study compares the performance of a microfluidic technique and a conventional bulk method to manufacture conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CPNs) embedded within a biodegradable poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether-block-poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PEG5K–PLGA55K) matrix. The influence of PEG5K–PLGA55K and conjugated polymers cyano-substituted poly(p-phenylene vinylene) (CN-PPV) and poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole) (F8BT) on the physicochemical properties of the CPNs was also evaluated. Both techniques enabled CPN production with high end product yields (?70–95%). However, while the bulk technique (solvent displacement) under optimal conditions generated small nanoparticles (∼70–100 nm) with similar optical properties (quantum yields ∼35%), the microfluidic approach produced larger CPNs (140–260 nm) with significantly superior quantum yields (49–55%) and tailored emission spectra. CPNs containing CN-PPV showed smaller size distributions and tuneable emission spectra compared to F8BT systems prepared under the same conditions. The presence of PEG5K–PLGA55K did not affect the size or optical properties of the CPNs and provided a neutral net electric charge as is often required for biomedical applications. The microfluidics flow-based device was successfully used for the continuous preparation of CPNs over a 24 hour period. On the basis of the results presented here, it can be concluded that the microfluidic device used in this study can be used to optimize the production of bright CPNs with tailored properties with good reproducibility.
2040-3364
2009-2019
Abelha, T. F.
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Phillips, T. W.
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Bannock, J. H.
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Nightingale, A. M.
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Dreiss, C. A.
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Kemal, E.
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Urbano, L.
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deMello, J. C.
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Green, M.
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Dailey, L. A.
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Abelha, T. F.
f0b34cfa-783f-4ae7-a753-4145698ead06
Phillips, T. W.
ccaac4ca-e774-45ba-b6bf-bb5dac709286
Bannock, J. H.
95614580-dde2-456e-b429-2af6d1336c31
Nightingale, A. M.
4b51311d-c6c3-40d5-a13f-ab8917031ab3
Dreiss, C. A.
cd42ef46-4b25-4316-88b9-f479e4ef8061
Kemal, E.
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Urbano, L.
889bd559-c63e-4a12-8f2f-2311be17db6b
deMello, J. C.
4807193f-f95b-4c91-9cb9-f52df1efc9f4
Green, M.
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Dailey, L. A.
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Abelha, T. F., Phillips, T. W., Bannock, J. H., Nightingale, A. M., Dreiss, C. A., Kemal, E., Urbano, L., deMello, J. C., Green, M. and Dailey, L. A. (2017) Bright conjugated polymer nanoparticles containing a biodegradable shell produced at high yields and with tuneable optical properties by a scalable microfluidic device. Nanoscale, 9 (5), 2009-2019. (doi:10.1039/C6NR09162H).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study compares the performance of a microfluidic technique and a conventional bulk method to manufacture conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CPNs) embedded within a biodegradable poly(ethylene glycol) methyl ether-block-poly(lactide-co-glycolide) (PEG5K–PLGA55K) matrix. The influence of PEG5K–PLGA55K and conjugated polymers cyano-substituted poly(p-phenylene vinylene) (CN-PPV) and poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole) (F8BT) on the physicochemical properties of the CPNs was also evaluated. Both techniques enabled CPN production with high end product yields (?70–95%). However, while the bulk technique (solvent displacement) under optimal conditions generated small nanoparticles (∼70–100 nm) with similar optical properties (quantum yields ∼35%), the microfluidic approach produced larger CPNs (140–260 nm) with significantly superior quantum yields (49–55%) and tailored emission spectra. CPNs containing CN-PPV showed smaller size distributions and tuneable emission spectra compared to F8BT systems prepared under the same conditions. The presence of PEG5K–PLGA55K did not affect the size or optical properties of the CPNs and provided a neutral net electric charge as is often required for biomedical applications. The microfluidics flow-based device was successfully used for the continuous preparation of CPNs over a 24 hour period. On the basis of the results presented here, it can be concluded that the microfluidic device used in this study can be used to optimize the production of bright CPNs with tailored properties with good reproducibility.

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Abelha et al Nanoscale resubmitted manuscript_R1.pdf - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 January 2017
Published date: 7 February 2017
Organisations: Mechatronics

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 404748
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404748
ISSN: 2040-3364
PURE UUID: c23166a3-c4f0-402c-a147-ff69ac958fff
ORCID for A. M. Nightingale: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2445-4827

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Date deposited: 20 Jan 2017 15:20
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: T. F. Abelha
Author: T. W. Phillips
Author: J. H. Bannock
Author: C. A. Dreiss
Author: E. Kemal
Author: L. Urbano
Author: J. C. deMello
Author: M. Green
Author: L. A. Dailey

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