The fabrication of mesoporous silica microcapsules with a highly controlled particle size ranging in the micrometer size presents a major challenge in many academic and industrial research areas, such as for the developement of smart drug delivery systems with a well controlled loading and release of (bio)active molecules. Many studies based on the solvent evaporation or solvent diffusion methods have been developed during the last two decades in order to control the particle size, which is often found to range at a sub-micrometer scale. Droplet-based microfluidics proved during the last decade a powerful tool to produce highly monodisperse and mesoporous silica solid microspheres with a controllable size in the micrometer range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
October 2007
We investigate the dynamic behavior upon lateral compression of two mixed films made with one of the two semifluorinated alkanes F(CF2)8(CH2)18H and F(CF2)10(CH2)10H and the natural alpha-helix alamethicin peptide. Surface pressure, surface potential versus molecular area isotherms, and grazing-incidence x-ray diffraction were applied to characterize this system. We show that both mixed films demix vertically to form two asymmetric flat bilayers where the lower layer is made of alamethicin and the upper layer is made of semifluorinated molecules.
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