With increasing level of polymer solution involvement in multiphase microdevice for formation of emulsion and fabrication of functional materials, it is of paramount importance to systematically understand the relevant physics of droplet formation in non-Newtonian fluids and how the material formation process may be affected due to the complex rheological effect. The chapter aims to review and discuss the recent advances in technologies that enable fabrication and application of functional materials formed from non-Newtonian microfluidic multiphase system. Rheological behavior of polymer solutions and the mathematical models are reviewed. The influence of microstructure on rheological behavior of polymer solutions and the fundamental physical phenomena driving non-Newtonian microfluidic multiphase system are discussed. Shear thinning and viscoelastic effect on breakup dynamics and droplet formation are presented. The microfabrication process of the device and synthesis of emulsion-templated materials with potential industrial and biochemical applications are elucidated.Keywords: non-Newtonian fluid, microfluidic, multiphase system, functional material
. IntroductionEmulsion is mixture of two immiscible liquids, where one liquid is dispersed as droplets in another liquid that forms a continuous phase [ ]. The availability of a wide range of technologies for emulsion generation and manipulation by microfluidic multiphase system has enabled the applications of microfluidics in a plethora of fields, such as fabrication of coreshell microspheres and capsules using emulsion droplets as a template for drug encapsulation and release and generation of jets as precursors of microfibers for application in wound dressing and tissue engineering. Emulsion can be formed with aqueous/oil multiphase system or all aqueous multiphase system, both of which involves the use of Newtonian fluids or non-© 2016 The Author(s). Licensee InTech. This chapter is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Newtonian fluids. In Newtonian fluids such as simple organic liquids, solutions of lowmolecular-weight inorganic salts, molten metals, or salts, the shear stress at steady condition in laminar flow is linearly proportional to the shear rate, i.e., the tensors that describe the viscous stress and the strain rate are related by a constant viscosity tensor which is independent of the stress state and velocity of the flow. In contrast, non-Newtonian fluids possess such properties that flow curve of shear stress versus shear rate is nonlinear or does not pass through the origin and the apparent viscosity as defined by shear stress divided by shear rate is not constant at a given temperature and pressure, as the apparent viscosity is also influenced by shear rate, the kinematic history of the fluid element, flow conditions, or microchannel conf...