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1.
J Dent ; 146: 105038, 2024 May 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38714242

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This laboratory study assessed the performance of a novel fluoride dentifrice containing micro-fibrillated cellulose (MFC) and entrapped silica. METHODS: Removal of extrinsic stains was assessed using the pellicle cleaning ratio (PCR) method, and radioactive dentin abrasivity (RDA) was measured, to calculate a cleaning efficiency index (CEI). Fluoride efficacy was evaluated using widely used remineralization and fluoride uptake methods. The test product (Protegera™) was compared to common dentifrices (Crest - Cavity Protection™ and ProHealth™, Sensodyne Pronamel™, Arm & Hammer™ Advanced Whitening, Crest ProHealth™, and Colgate Optic White™). RESULTS: The PCR for the MFC dentifrice (141) was comparable to three known marketed stain-removing dentifrices (Arm & Hammer™ Advanced Whitening, Crest ProHealth™, and Colgate Optic White™) but it had a significantly lower RDA (88 ± 6) than 5 other products. This gave it the highest CEI of the tested products (2.0). In a 10-day pH cycling study, the fluoride efficacy of the MFC product was comparable to Sensodyne Pronamel and Crest Cavity Protection. The MFC dentifrice was superior for promoting fluoride uptake into incipient enamel lesions compared to the USP reference dentifrice. CONCLUSION: The MFC dentifrice has low abrasion, but despite this, it is highly effective in removing stained pellicle. It also is an efficacious fluoride source when compared to relevant commercially available fluoride dentifrices with high dentin abrasivity. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The addition of micro-fibrillated cellulose to a fluoride dentifrice gives a low abrasive product that can effectively remove external stains, and serve as an effective fluoride source. This combination of benefits seems well suited to enamel protection and caries prevention.

2.
Dent J (Basel) ; 12(1)2023 Dec 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38248215

ABSTRACT

Dentifrice performance in the removal of dental plaque is influenced by the interactions of dentifrice components with tooth surfaces. This randomized controlled clinical study assessed the effectiveness and safety of a novel fluoride dentifrice formulation that included a micro-fibrillated cellulose network with entangled microcrystalline cellulose and silica particles (ProtegeraTM), and compared this to a positive control fluoride dentifrice (Crest Cavity Protection™). Whole mouth dental plaque levels in 82 healthy adults were measured after the first supervised use, and following a week of twice daily use at home. Overall, the test dentifrice was at least three times and up to four times more effective in whole-mouth plaque reductions, with a 38.6% reduction on first use, a 30.9% reduction at day 7, and a 41.6% reduction from day 1 to day 7, compared to reductions of 12.0%, 9.6% and 11.6%, respectively for the positive control, and up to seven times more effective in lingual plaque reductions, than the reference dentifrice (p < 0.001), with a 27.7% reduction on first use, a 22.3% reduction at day 7, and a 31.0% reduction from day 1 to day 7, compared to reductions of 4.4%, 2.2%, and 4.5%, respectively, for the positive control. No safety issues arose from the use of the test dentifrice. These results indicate that including micro-fibrillated cellulose enhances plaque removal effectiveness, without causing adverse changes to oral soft tissues.

3.
Soft Matter ; 18(3): 554-565, 2022 Jan 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34931640

ABSTRACT

Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is a disease that affects red blood cells (RBCs). Healthy RBCs are highly deformable objects that under flow can penetrate blood capillaries smaller than their typical size. In SCA there is an impaired deformability of some cells, which are much stiffer and with a different shape than healthy cells, and thereby affect regular blood flow. It is known that blood from patients with SCA has a higher viscosity than normal blood. However, it is unclear how the rigidity of cells is related to the viscosity of blood, in part because SCA patients are often treated with transfusions of variable amounts of normal RBCs and only a fraction of cells will be stiff. Here, we report systematic experimental measurements of the viscosity of a suspension varying the fraction of rigid particles within a suspension of healthy cells. We also perform systematic numerical simulations of a similar mixed suspension of soft RBCs, rigid particles, and their hydrodynamic interactions. Our results show that there is a rheological signature within blood viscosity to clearly identify the fraction of rigidified cells among healthy deformable cells down to a 5% volume fraction of rigidified cells. Although aggregation of RBCs is known to affect blood rheology at low shear rates, and our simulations mimic this effect via an adhesion potential, we show that such adhesion, or aggregation, is unlikely to provide a physical rationalization for the viscosity increase observed in the experiments at moderate shear rates due to rigidified cells. Through numerical simulations, we also highlight that most of the viscosity increase of the suspension is due to the rigidity of the particles rather than their sickled or spherical shape. Our results are relevant to better characterize SCA, provide useful insights relevant to rheological consequences of blood transfusions, and, more generally, extend to the rheology of mixed suspensions having particles with different rigidities, as well as offering possibilities for developments in the field of soft material composites.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell , Blood Viscosity , Erythrocytes , Humans , Rheology , Viscosity
4.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci ; 290: 102392, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33740709

ABSTRACT

Phospholipids are the main constituents of cell membranes and act as natural stabilizers of milk fat globules. Phospholipids are used in a wide range of applications, e.g. as emulsifiers in cosmetic, pharmaceutical and food products. While processed emulsion droplets are usually stabilized by a monolayer of phospholipids, cell membranes have a phospholipid bilayer structure and milk fat globules are stabilized by a complex phospholipid trilayer membrane. Despite the broad relevance of phospholipids, there are still many scientific challenges in understanding how their behavior at the fluid-fluid interface affects microstructure, stability, and physico-chemical properties of natural and industrial products. Most of these challenges arise from the experimental difficulties related to the investigation of the molecular arrangement of phospholipids in situ at the fluid-fluid interface and the quantification of their partitioning between the bulk phase and the interface, both under static and flow conditions. This task is further complicated by the presence of other surface-active components, such as proteins, that can interact with phospholipids and compete for space at the interface. Here, we review the methodologies available from the literature to detect and quantify phospholipids, focusing on oil-water interfaces, and highlight current limitations and future perspectives.


Subject(s)
Emulsifying Agents , Phospholipids , Emulsions , Water
5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 124(17): 177801, 2020 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32412295

ABSTRACT

Polyelectrolytes (PEs) are charged polymers in polar solvents. Classical scaling theories suggest that the viscosity η for semidilute unentangled PE solutions in θ solvents obeys the empirical Fuoss law η∝n_{p}^{1/2} in the "salt-free" regime, and η∝n_{p}^{5/4} in the regime affected by added salt, where the polymer concentration n_{p} is defined as the number of monomers per volume. However, recent experiments have also reported η∝n_{p}^{0.68} and η∝n_{p}^{0.91}, which are at odds with the classical scaling theories. To rationalize the four distinct scaling laws, we probe the electrostatic energy per monomer under the influence of salt and their contributions to the viscosity of PE solutions. We identify four consecutive regimes dependent on the magnitude of the ratio of the polymer concentration n_{p} to the salt concentration n_{s}, which capture the unexplained observations, and provide physical insights for the influence of salt contamination and added salt on the properties of both weakly and strongly charged semidilute unentangled PE solutions.

6.
Proc Math Phys Eng Sci ; 475(2227): 20190223, 2019 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31423102

ABSTRACT

It is often necessary to extract a small amount of a suspension, such as blood, from a larger sample of the same material for the purposes of diagnostics, testing or imaging. A practical challenge is that the cells in blood sediment noticeably on the time scale of a few minutes, making a representative subsampling of the original sample challenging. Guided by experimental data, we develop a Kynch sedimentation model to discuss design considerations that ensure a representative subsampling of blood, from a container of constant cross-sectional area, for the entire range of physiologically relevant hematocrit over a specified time of interest. Additionally, we show that this design may be modified to exploit the sedimentation and perform subsampling to achieve either higher or lower hematocrit relative to that of the original sample. Thus, our method provides a simple tool to either concentrate or dilute small quantities of blood or other sedimenting suspensions.

8.
Adv Mater ; 30(46): e1804153, 2018 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30368924

ABSTRACT

Biofilms, surface-attached communities of bacterial cells, are a concern in health and in industrial operations because of persistent infections, clogging of flows, and surface fouling. Extracellular matrices provide mechanical protection to biofilm-dwelling cells as well as protection from chemical insults, including antibiotics. Understanding how biofilm material properties arise from constituent matrix components and how these properties change in different environments is crucial for designing biofilm removal strategies. Here, using rheological characterization and surface analyses of Vibrio cholerae biofilms, it is discovered how extracellular polysaccharides, proteins, and cells function together to define biofilm mechanical and interfacial properties. Using insight gained from our measurements, a facile capillary peeling technology is developed to remove biofilms from surfaces or to transfer intact biofilms from one surface to another. It is shown that the findings are applicable to other biofilm-forming bacterial species and to multiple surfaces. Thus, the technology and the understanding that have been developed could potentially be employed to characterize and/or treat biofilm-related infections and industrial biofouling problems.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Adhesion , Biofilms , Materials Testing , Vibrio cholerae/drug effects , Agar , Anti-Bacterial Agents , Biofouling , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , Humans , Industrial Microbiology , Rheology , Stress, Mechanical , Surface Properties , Vibrio Infections/drug therapy
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(32): 8082-8086, 2018 08 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30049705

ABSTRACT

In hydraulic fracturing, water is injected at high pressure to crack shale formations. More sustainable techniques use aqueous foams as injection fluids to reduce the water use and wastewater treatment of conventional hydrofractures. However, the physical mechanism of foam fracturing remains poorly understood, and this lack of understanding extends to other applications of compressible foams such as fire-fighting, energy storage, and enhanced oil recovery. Here we show that the injection of foam is much different from the injection of incompressible fluids and results in striking dynamics of fracture propagation that are tied to the compressibility of the foam. An understanding of bubble-scale dynamics is used to develop a model for macroscopic, compressible flow of the foam, from which a scaling law for the fracture length as a function of time is identified and exhibits excellent agreement with our experimental results.

10.
Langmuir ; 34(17): 4991-4997, 2018 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29642699

ABSTRACT

Interfacial tension is a key parameter affecting industrially relevant properties of emulsions, such as morphology and stability. Although several methods are available to measure interfacial tension, they are based on generation of droplets starting from separate emulsion components and cannot directly probe the interfacial tension of an emulsion as such. Here, a novel microfluidic tensiometry device to measure interfacial tension of a water-in-oil emulsion in situ as a function of surfactant concentration is presented. In our approach, interfacial tension is obtained from a quantitative analysis of the deformation of individual emulsion droplets under steady state shear flow in microfluidic channels. The technique is validated by comparing the results with experimental data obtained by the pendant drop method in a broad range of interfacial tension values. A very good agreement is found, and an estimate of the surfactant critical micellar concentration (CMC) is also obtained. The proposed microfluidic setup can be used even at high surfactant concentrations, where the measurement is made more challenging by sample viscoelasticity, thus providing a powerful tool to determine the interfacial tension of complex systems in an extended concentration range. The technique could be also used for in-line monitoring of emulsion processing.

11.
Adv Colloid Interface Sci ; 256: 305-325, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29622270

ABSTRACT

Emulsions are suspensions of droplets ubiquitous in oil recovery from underground reservoirs. Oil is typically trapped in geological porous media where emulsions are either formed in situ or injected to elicit oil mobilization and thus enhance the amount of oil recovered. Here, we briefly review basic concepts on geometrical and wetting features of porous media, including thin film stability and fluids penetration modes, which are more relevant for oil recovery and oil-contaminated aquifers. Then, we focus on the description of emulsion flow in porous media spanning from the behaviour of single droplets to the collective flow of a suspension of droplets, including the effect of bulk and interfacial rheology, hydrodynamic and physico-chemical interactions. Finally, we describe the particular case of emulsions used in underground porous media for enhanced oil recovery, thereby discussing some perspectives of future work. Although focused on oil recovery related topics, most of the insights we provide are useful towards remediation of oil-contaminated aquifers and for a basic understanding of emulsion flow in any kind of porous media, such as biological tissues.

12.
Phys Rev Lett ; 120(7): 074501, 2018 Feb 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29542955

ABSTRACT

Understanding jet formation from non-Newtonian fluids is important for improving the quality of various printing and dispensing techniques. Here, we use a laser-based nozzleless method to investigate impulsively formed jets of non-Newtonian fluids. Experiments with a time-resolved imaging setup demonstrate multiple regimes during jet formation that can result in zero, single, or multiple drops per laser pulse. These regimes depend on the ink thickness, ink rheology, and laser energy. For optimized printing, it is desirable to select parameters that result in a single-drop breakup; however, the strain-rate dependent rheology of these inks makes it challenging to determine these conditions a priori. Rather, we present a methodology for characterizing these regimes using dimensionless parameters evaluated from the process parameters and measured ink rheology that are obtained prior to printing and, so, offer a criterion for a single-drop breakup.

13.
Eur Phys J E Soft Matter ; 41(3): 45, 2018 Mar 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29589210

ABSTRACT

Emulsions made of oil, water and surfactants are widespread soft materials with complex structures depending on composition and temperature. Emulsion phase behavior at rest has been widely investigated but flow-induced effects, which are very relevant in many applications, can still be further explored towards improved emulsion microstructural design. In this work, we use low energy emulsification processing to create small-sized emulsions. In a previous report, we showed the emulsion morphology development and the effect of flow on the microstructure of a highly viscoelastic attractive emulsion which result in a concentrated nanoemulsion after viscoelastic droplet filaments are disrupted. Here, we show that upon stopping the flow, the filaments slowly buckle, recoil and finally form clusters of randomly flocculated droplets. We thus obtain two completely different emulsion morphologies simply induced by the action of flow, where in both cases attractive interactions play a key role. The emulsion high interfacial area represents a valuable feature for several applications such as upstream operations, microreaction media and drug delivery.

14.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(27): 23353-23361, 2018 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29493215

ABSTRACT

Embedded three-dimensional (EMB3D) printing is an emerging technique that enables free-form fabrication of complex architectures. In this approach, a nozzle is translated omnidirectionally within a soft matrix that surrounds and supports the patterned material. To optimize print fidelity, we have investigated the effects of matrix viscoplasticity on the EMB3D printing process. Specifically, we determine how matrix composition, print path and speed, and nozzle diameter affect the yielded region within the matrix. By characterizing the velocity and strain fields and analyzing the dimensions of the yielded regions, we determine that scaling relationships based on the Oldroyd number, Od, exist between these dimensions and the rheological properties of the matrix materials and printing parameters. Finally, we use EMB3D printing to create complex architectures within an elastomeric silicone matrix. Our methods and findings will both facilitate future characterization of viscoplastic matrices and motivate the development of new materials for EMB3D printing.

15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(41): E8557-E8564, 2017 10 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28923973

ABSTRACT

The flow behavior of fiber suspensions has been studied extensively, especially in the limit of dilute concentrations and rigid fibers; at the other extreme, however, where the suspensions are concentrated and the fibers are highly flexible, much less is understood about the flow properties. We use a microfluidic method to produce uniform concentrated suspensions of high aspect ratio, flexible microfibers, and we demonstrate the shear thickening and gelling behavior of such microfiber suspensions, which, to the best of our knowledge, has not been reported previously. By rheological means, we show that flowing the suspension triggers the irreversible formation of topological entanglements of the fibers resulting in an entangled water-filled network. This phenomenon suggests that flexible fiber suspensions can be exploited to produce a new family of flow-induced gelled materials, such as porous hydrogels. A significant consequence of these flow properties is that the microfiber suspension is injectable through a needle, from which it can be extruded directly as a hydrogel without any chemical reactions or further treatments. Additionally, we show that this fiber hydrogel is a soft, viscoelastic, yield-stress material.

16.
Soft Matter ; 13(34): 5696-5703, 2017 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28744531

ABSTRACT

Although the phase behavior of emulsions has been thoroughly investigated, the effect of flow on emulsion morphology, which is relevant for many applications, is far from being fully elucidated. Here, we investigate an emulsion based on two common nonionic surfactants in a range of water concentration where complex and diverse microstructures are found at rest, such as multilamellar and bicontinuous phases. In spite of such complexity, once subjected to shear flow, all the emulsions investigated are characterized by thinning filaments which eventually break up into a concentrated suspension of micro-sized water-based droplets dispersed in a continuous oil phase. The so-formed droplets tend to align in string-like structures. The emulsions exhibit a yield stress, whose value can be estimated by the plug-core velocity profiles in pressure-driven capillary flow, thus providing evidence of weakly attractive interdroplet interactions. The latter are consistent with droplet clustering and percolation observed at rest. These results can also be relevant to the flow behavior of other liquid-liquid systems, such as polymer blends, where the flow-induced microstructure is under debate as well.

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