1 / 17

Polymer Discovery Via Microfluidic Enzymatic Synthesis

Polymer Discovery Via Microfluidic Enzymatic Synthesis. Prof. Peter Y. Wong Prof. David Kaplan Tufts University - Medford, MA October 3, 2006. Biochemical Science. Synthesis 1990-. Polymer science 1970-. Enzyme. Microsystems Technology. Mechanical. Electronics. Micro-fabrication.

Télécharger la présentation

Polymer Discovery Via Microfluidic Enzymatic Synthesis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Polymer Discovery Via Microfluidic Enzymatic Synthesis Prof. Peter Y. Wong Prof. David Kaplan Tufts University - Medford, MA October 3, 2006

  2. Biochemical Science Synthesis 1990- Polymer science 1970- Enzyme Microsystems Technology Mechanical Electronics Micro-fabrication Engineering Overview • Markets • Needs • Problems • Solution • Team • Next Steps • Summary

  3. Many Markets • Any market that benefits from new biochemicals • Improved Foods • Additives, Modification, Nutrition • Green Chemistry • Agricultural, Packaging, Analysis • New Medicines • Topical, Digested, Structural

  4. Markets Needs vs.Wants • New products • Better • Faster • Cheaper • Differentiated • Macro and Micromolecules needed • New material • New processes • Focus on new polymers and processes

  5. Problems and Risks • Current Polymer Discovery Process • Long time with process and people • High costs and large resources needed • FDA, EPA stringent regulations • Limited research to commercialization • Alternate Approaches • Nanoscience/technologies - far in future? • Biomimetics/Bioinspiration - hit or miss? • Microengineering/fluidics - scalability?

  6. Our Solution • Achieve “Green ( ) Polymer Chemistry” through • Enzymatic Synthesis and • Microfluidics • Enzymatic polymerizations can produce products • via mild reaction conditions w/o toxic reagents • in an environmentally friendly synthetic process • that can be scaled from microscale to macroscale • Target macromolecules include • polysaccharides, polyesters, polycarbonates, poly(amino acid)s, polyaromatics, and/or vinyl polymers.

  7. Monomer Enzyme 1 Natural antioxidant Enzyme 2 Antioxidant Polymer Microfluidic Enzymatic Cascade • Universal Lab-On-Chip is very far away • Application Specific Integrated Microfluidic (ASIM) device • Example ASIM – • produce vitamin C enriched polymers (PMMA) polymer • has both scientific and market value.

  8. PMMA Polymer • Disruptive Technology in Packaging • Vitamin C enriched polymers can replace butylated hydroxy anisole (BRA) and butylated hydroxy toluene (BHT) - FDA limits conc. To 0.02%. • New Topical Medicine • Antioxidants are considered important in reducing aging-related phenomena by providing protection against free radicals. • Nutraceutical Supplementation • Ascorbic acid may have an overall positive impact on public health because humans lack the ability to synthesize vitamin C

  9. ASIM • Goals: • Two enzymatic cascade reactions to produce PMMA • low cost devices made of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) • efficient method to optimize process with external controls

  10. Translation from Abstract to Hardware ascorbic acid monomer AA-Monomer AA- Ascorbic Acid MMA- Methyl Methacrylate PMMA- Poly (Methyl Methacrylate) P-AA-MMA – Ploy L-Ascorbic Methyl Methacrylate HRP – Horse Radish Peroxidase lipase HRP : hydrogen peroxide ascorbic acid Antioxidant polymer monomer : : Input Input : hydrogen Input Input ascorbic acid ascorbic acid HRP peroxide #1 #2 : : : : Input Input Check Valve Output Output Reaction Vessel #2 Reaction Vessel #1 Reaction Vessel #1 monomer polymer in solvent in solvent AA-Monomer P-AA-MMA AA-Monomer React with lipase React with HRP Hydrogen peroxide : : unreacted unreacted Output Output : : unreacted unreacted Output Output lipase hydrogen peroxide hydrogen peroxide ascorbic acid ascorbic acid

  11. Improved Version 1 Stage I Enzymatic Transesterification Synthesis L-Ascrbyl Methyl methacrylate Reaction vessel 1 50C<reaction temp <60C, 45 min.<reaction time<60 min. Flow rate<0.01 ml/min. 2 Stage II HRP Polymerization L-Ascrbyl Methylmethacrylate Reaction vessel 2 60 min.<reaction time<90 min. 20 min.<shaking time<30 min. Flow rate<0.01 ml/min. Function driven Step Material Quantity used Step Material Quantity used 2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methylphenol, Dioxane. Functional Substrate (G1.1) L-ascorbic acid (AA)+50% Diox. 150mg, 0.852 mM Mix1 (G2.1) w/G2.2 L-Ascrbyl methylmethacrylate ~0.02 g 0.082 mM Ascorbic acid, Dioxane 1st Vessel >50C 2,2,2-trifluoroethyl methacrylate 0.182 mL, 1.278 mM Tetrahydrofuran(solvent) (THF) N2 flushed 0.11 ml Initiator A B 2nd Vessel HRP 1.6mg/ 0.05ml C TFM, Diox. Lipase, 1.5mlx2 anhydrous Dioxane Dissolve (G2.2) water 2 ul D HRP,THF Enzyme (G1.2) Antarctica lipase (free)+ 40% Diox. 12.5mg Hydrogen Peroxide 9.3ul Hydrogen peroxide E AA_PMMA, /PMMA/ 2.5mg Anti-poly 60C (G1.3) 2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methylphenol +10% Diox. Mix 2 2 hours (G2.3) Shaking 1 hr 2,4-pentanedione (trigger) 1.77ul Vessel 1 L-Ascrbyl Methyl methacrylate (AA-MMA) (G 1) Vessel 2 Poly L-Ascorbyl Methyl methacrylate (P-AA-MMA) (G.2)

  12. ASIM manufacturing • DRIE Si wafer • PDMS Casting • Thermal Plasma Bonding to glass slide • Embed fluid connectors PDMS on SI PDMS on Glass slide

  13. Pneumatic controlling Micrometer Sample loading Syringes External Hardware

  14. Repeat unit Signal strength Macro Molecular weight/ charge Repeat unit Micro Chemical Analysis • Macro vs. Micro comparison with MALDI-TOF • Need purification but polymer exists

  15. Team • David Kaplan - expertise in enzymatic reactions • Peter Wong - expertise in microfluidics • Jin Zou - PhD graduate in Mechanical Engineering • Martin Son - Tufts Technology Transfer Office • Tufts Capabilities: • Enzymatic synthesis research, development, and production • ASIM - Microfluidic design, analysis, and fabrication • Polymer discovery program – design of experiments and testing

  16. Next Steps • Identify 2 to 3 market products to tackle • 2 months • Initial description of enzymatic synthesis process • 2 months • Convert preliminary patent application to full application with these examples of synthesis • 1 month • Develop next generation of ASIM devices for those specific market products • 6 months • Develop new polymer products • 6 months • Partner with companies to develop new polymers for their markets

  17. Summary • Food/Medicine/Biochem Markets need advantages of new polymers • Microfluidic Enzymatic Synthesis • Make custom polymers • Faster, cheaper discovery • Scalable to mass production • Need partners and funding to • do market analysis, • help secure IP, • develop small number of prototypes, and • expand to market • Contact Martin.Son@tufts.edu

More Related