This
work focuses on the fabrication and organic dye adsorption
capacity of pill-shaped polyimide aerogel microparticles of diameter
approximately 200 μm and length approximately 1000 μm.
First, spherical polyimide sol droplets suspended in silicone oil
are generated in a microfluidic droplet generator. Second, these droplets
are guided into a contraction flow channel to deform them into pill-shaped
droplets. Third, the pill-shaped droplets undergo sol–gel transition
in a heated section of the flow channel and turn into particles. Finally,
the pill-shaped aerogel microparticles are recovered via solvent exchange
and supercritical drying and characterized. The data indicate that
the flow rates of polyimide sol and silicone oil strongly influence
the length of the microparticles while surfactants, although not necessary
to obtain pill-shaped particles, exert strong influence on the aspect
ratio of the particles. The aspect ratio of particles and the internal
morphology are discussed using hydrodynamic and interfacial forces.
The ionic dye adsorption capacity of these pill-shaped particles is
determined and compared with that of spherical gel microparticles.
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