Multiple emulsions and techniques for the formation of multiple emulsions

US10195571B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10195571-B2
Application numberUS-201615235423-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateAug 12, 2016
Priority dateJul 6, 2011
Publication dateFeb 5, 2019
Grant dateFeb 5, 2019

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

Multiple emulsions and techniques for the formation of multiple emulsions are generally described. A multiple emulsion, as used herein, describes larger droplets that contain one or more smaller droplets therein. In some embodiments, the larger droplet or droplets may be suspended in a carrying fluid containing the larger droplets that, in turn, contain the smaller droplets. As described below, multiple emulsions can be formed in one step in certain embodiments, with generally precise repeatability, and can be tailored in some embodiments to include a relatively thin layer of fluid separating two other fluids.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. An article, comprising: a collection of particles, each particle comprising a shell comprising a polymer and at least partially containing a fluid, wherein: (a) the particles have an average diameter of less than about 1 mm, (b) at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have a shell with an average thickness of less than about 0.05 times the average cross-sectional diameter of the particle, and/or have a shell with an average thickness of less than about 1 micrometer, and (c) substantially all of the polymer within the shells has a glass transition temperature of at least about 85° C. and/or substantially all of the polymer within the shells is at least partially soluble in octane. 2. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have a shell with an average thickness of less than about 1 micrometer. 3. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have a shell with an average thickness of less than about 0.05 times the average cross-sectional diameter of the particle. 4. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have a shell comprising polystyrene. 5. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have a shell comprising polycaprolactone. 6. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have shell comprising polyisoprene. 7. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection have a shell comprising poly(lactic acid). 8. The article of claim 7 , wherein the fluid comprises a surfactant. 9. The article of claim 8 , wherein the surfactant is an ionic surfactant. 10. The article of claim 1 , wherein substantially all of the polymer within the shells has a glass transition temperature of at least about 85° C. 11. The article of claim 10 , wherein substantially all of the polymer within the shells has a glass transition temperature of between about 85° C. and about 200° C. 12. The article of claim 1 , wherein substantially all of the polymer within the shells is at least partially soluble in octane. 13. The article of claim 1 , wherein substantially all of the polymer within the shells has a Young's modulus of at least about 1 MPa. 14. The article of claim 1 , wherein the at least about 90% of the particles within the collection can be subjected to an absolute pressure of at least about 200 kPa without rupturing. 15. A collection of particles as defined in claim 1 , wherein the collection has an overall average diameter and a distribution of diameters such that the coefficient of variation of the cross-sectional diameters of the particles is less than about 10%.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • Operations & Transport · mapped topic

  • Polymerisation; cross-linking · CPC title

  • Operations & Transport · mapped topic

  • Operations & Transport · mapped topic

  • theories or general explanations of phenomena associated with mixing or generalizations of a concept by comparison of equivalent methods · CPC title

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What does patent US10195571B2 cover?
Multiple emulsions and techniques for the formation of multiple emulsions are generally described. A multiple emulsion, as used herein, describes larger droplets that contain one or more smaller droplets therein. In some embodiments, the larger droplet or droplets may be suspended in a carrying fluid containing the larger droplets that, in turn, contain the smaller droplets. As described below,…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Harvard College
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification B01F5/0085. Mapped technology areas include Operations & Transport.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Feb 05 2019 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 7 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).