Gas and particle dynamics of a contoured shock tube for pre-clinical microparticle drug delivery


Autoria(s): Truong, N. K.; Liu, Y.; Kendall, M. A. F.
Contribuinte(s)

K. Takayama

Y. Horie

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

We investigate the gas-particle dynamics of a device designed for biological pre-clinical experiments. The device uses transonic/supersonic gas flow to accelerate microparticles such that they penetrate the outer skin layers. By using a shock tube coupled to a correctly expanded nozzle, a quasi-one-dimensional, quasi-steady flow (QSF) is produced to uniformly accelerate the microparticles. The system utilises a microparticle cassette (a diaphragm sealed container) that incorporates a jet mixing mechanism to stir the particles prior to diaphragm rupture. Pressure measurements reveal that a QSF exit period - suitable for uniformly accelerating microparticles - exists between 155 and 220 mus after diaphragm rupture. Immediately preceding the QSF period, a starting process secondary shock was shown to form with its (x,t) trajectory comparing well to theoretical estimates. To characterise the microparticle, flow particle image velocimetry experiments were conducted at the nozzle exit, using particle payloads with varying diameter (2.7-48 mu m), density (600-16,800 kg/m(3)) and mass (0.25-10 mg). The resultant microparticle velocities were temporally uniform. The experiments also show that the starting process does not significantly influence the microparticle nozzle exit velocities. The velocity distribution across the nozzle exit was also uniform for the majority of microparticle types tested. For payload masses typically used in pre-clinical drug and vaccine applications (

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:81931

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer Berlin/Heidelberg

Palavras-Chave #Mechanics #Biolistic #Ccw #Piv #Starting Process #Transonic #Vaccine #Ballistic Delivery #Human Skin #Flow #Dna #Microprojectiles #Nozzle #Cells #CX #090304 Medical Devices #110799 Immunology not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article