Subtleties of UV-crosslinking in microfluidic particle fabrication: UV dosage and intensity matter
Sabrina Marnoto, Avi J. Patel, Sara M. Hashmi

TL;DR
This study investigates how UV dosage and intensity affect the crosslinking and mechanical properties of PEGDA microgels produced via microfluidic flow, emphasizing the importance of in-flow assessment for optimal fabrication.
Contribution
It introduces an integrated microfluidic approach to fabricate and analyze microgels, revealing that gelation occurs from the inside out and highlighting the impact of UV parameters on gel properties.
Findings
PEGDA microgels gel from the inside out.
Incomplete gelation results in a fluid core within the particle.
UV dosage influences the degree of crosslinking and mechanical strength.
Abstract
Curable hydrogels have tunable properties that make them well-suited for applications in drug delivery, cell therapies, and 3D bioprinting. Advances in microfluidic droplet generation enable rapid fabrication of polymer-filled droplets. UV-curable polymers offer a clear path toward using fluidic generation to produce monodisperse microgels with uniform properties. In flow, polymer concentration and UV exposure both control the degree of crosslinking. High UV intensity is often used to ensure complete gelation and avoid complications that may arise from partial curing. Optical microscopy can assess droplet and particle sizes in flow. However, optimizing formulations for mechanical properties usually requires removal of generated material and external measurement outside of flow. In this study, we couple droplet generation, microgel fabrication, and mechanics assessment within a single…
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