论文标题
微流体喷射冲击:扩散,飞溅,软底物变形和注射
Microfluidic jet impact: spreading, splashing, soft substrate deformation and injection
论文作者
论文摘要
注射针头会导致恐惧,疼痛和污染风险。每年数十亿个注射也会在材料消费和浪费方面造成环境负担。受控的微流体喷射系统提供无针的替代方法。但是,需要了解射流参数与产生的注射深度之间的关系以实现特定的皮肤层,并增强各种治疗化合物的药代动力学。皮肤的复杂性,不透明度和非线性机械性能构成了技术挑战。因此,替代物的使用对于理解如何无针注射的方法很有帮助。特别是,需要在喷射冲击和注射后液体挤压时减少不希望的飞溅,以最大程度地减少感染风险并确保准确的剂量。因此,在本文中,我们探讨了微流体射流特征如何影响结果对皮肤替代物的一系列材料的影响。速度在7-77 m/s和直径35-130 $μ$ m之间的喷气机针对剪切模量在0.2 kPa和26 GPA之间的基板。我们发现了七个不同的机制,具体取决于喷气惯性和底物剪切模量。此外,将三个不同的过渡区域确定为方案之间的阈值:i)扩散/溅起阈值,ii)凹痕形成阈值,iii)塑性/弹性变形阈值。这些阈值允许预测所需的射流速度和直径,以注入已知剪切模量的底物。我们发现,与韦伯数相比,射流速度是对注射深度的更好预测指标,因为射流直径不影响注入深度。我们的发现与推进无针头注射研究有关,因为皮肤的剪切模量取决于多种因素,例如种族,身体部位和环境条件。
Injecting with needles causes fear, pain and contamination risks. Billions of injections every year also cause environmental burden in terms of material consumption and waste. Controlled microfluidic-jet injection systems offer a needle-free alternative. However, understanding the relation between jet parameters and resulting injection depth are needed to enable targeting specific skin layers, and enhance the pharmacokinetics of various therapeutic compounds. The complexity of skin, its opacity and non-linear mechanical properties, pose a technological challenge. Hence the use of surrogates is instrumental to understand how to inject without needles. In particular, reducing undesired splashing upon jet impact and liquid squeeze-out after injection are needed to minimize infection risks and ensure accurate dosage. Therefore, in this paper we explore how microfluidic jet characteristics influence the impact outcome on a range of materials as skin surrogate. Jets with velocities between 7 - 77 m/s and diameters 35 - 130 $μ$m were directed at substrates with shear moduli between 0.2 kPa and 26 GPa. We found seven different regimes depending on jet inertia and substrate shear modulus. Furthermore, three distinct transition regions were identified as the thresholds between regimes: i) spreading/splashing threshold, ii) dimple formation threshold, and iii) plastic/elastic deformation threshold. These thresholds allow predicting the required jet velocity and diameter to inject substrates with known shear modulus. We found that jet velocity is a better predictor for the injection depth compared to the Weber number, as the jet diameter does not influence the injection depth. Our findings are relevant for advancing needle-free injection research, because the shear modulus of skin depends on multiple factors, such as ethnicity, body part and environmental conditions.