Robust fabrication of ultra-soft tunable PDMS microcapsules as a biomimetic model for red blood cells
Qi Chen, Naval Singh, Kerstin Schirrmann, Qi Zhou, Igor Chernyavsky,, Anne Juel

TL;DR
This paper presents a robust method to fabricate ultra-soft, tunable PDMS microcapsules that mimic red blood cell deformation and flow behavior, providing a new tool for microhaemodynamics research and biomedical applications.
Contribution
The authors develop a reliable fabrication process for monodisperse, hyperelastic PDMS microcapsules that replicate RBC deformability and dynamics under flow conditions.
Findings
Deflated capsules mimic RBC deformation and dynamics.
Capsules transition from parachute to slipper shape with flow increase.
High-throughput fabrication enables scalable production.
Abstract
Microcapsules with liquid cores encapsulated by thin membranes have many applications in science, medicine and industry. In this paper, we design a suspension of microcapsules which flow and deform like red blood cells (RBCs), as a valuable tool to investigate microhaemodynamics. A reconfigurable and easy-to-assemble 3D nested glass capillary device is used to robustly fabricate water-oil-water double emulsions which are then converted into spherical microcapsules with hyperelastic membranes by cross-linking the polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) layer coating the droplets. The resulting capsules are monodisperse to within 1% and can be made in a wide range of size and membrane thickness. We use osmosis to deflate by 36% initially spherical capsules of diameter 350 {\mu}m and a membrane thickness of 4% of their radius, in order to match the reduced volume of biconcave RBCs. We compare the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood properties and coagulation · Erythrocyte Function and Pathophysiology · Blood groups and transfusion
