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.

Highlights

  • MAGNETIC VESICLES – especially those involving polymers either as protective shell or as membrane – constitute a major class of magnetic carriers with potential applications in translational research and nanomedicine

  • This paper proposes a generic way to marry them with the ever growing domain of microfluidics, both for the production of magnetic polymer vesicles and for the evaluation of their capability for heat production by radiofrequency magnetic field hyperthermia

  • A reproducible protocol to prepare giant magnetic polymersomes – observable in real time by optical microscopy – is highly suitable for deciding whether polymersomes with magnetic nanoparticles embedded in their membranes under an applied magnetic field deform into ellipsoids and in that case whether the eccentricity is positive or negative

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

MAGNETIC VESICLES – especially those involving polymers either as protective shell or as membrane – constitute a major class of magnetic carriers with potential applications in translational research and nanomedicine. This paper proposes a generic way to marry them with the ever growing domain of microfluidics, both for the production of magnetic polymer vesicles and for the evaluation of their capability for heat production by radiofrequency magnetic field hyperthermia

Magnetic vesicles
Microfluidics to prepare vesicles
Magnetic hyperthermia: between dreams and physical limitations
Magnetic fluid
Chamber for magnetic-assisted recovery of vesicles
Microfluidic production of giant magnetic polymersomes
Temperature assessment at 33 nL scale

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