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"multilayered wrapping"
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Impact Driven Liquid Encapsulation: Promises, Development, and Future Prospects
2025
Encapsulation creates a protective outer layer(s) around a core cargo, which safeguards the cargo in aggressive surroundings. It also serves as a platform to impart various desired characteristics to the core cargo, including shell‐functionalization and targeted release characteristics. Encapsulation can be broadly classified into three categories: physical, chemical, and physicochemical techniques. This perspective focuses on an emerging class of impact‐driven physical encapsulation techniques, which offers several lucrative prospects compared to conventional encapsulation methods, including straightforward execution and ultrafast yet controlled wrapping. Two different categories of impact‐driven methods for achieving stable, ultrafast encapsulation of various core liquid analytes with one or more wrapping layers are discussed, namely, elastocapillary wrapping with ultrathin sheet(s) and a liquid–liquid encapsulation framework, where thin liquid film(s) are used to wrap liquid analytes, with an emphasis on the latter. The promising prospects of both approaches are discussed, recent developments are outlined, and areas of future research that can lead to a truly versatile and comprehensive encapsulation platform applicable to a broad range of practical applications are highlighted. This perspective explores impact‐driven encapsulation, focusing on liquid–liquid encapsulation for ultrafast, controlled wrapping of various liquid analytes. It discusses recent advancements, including scalable multidroplet/multilayer encapsulation, durable capsule formation, and active manipulation strategies. The study also outlines the associated challenges and discusses future directions for developing a versatile encapsulation platform with broad applications in targeted delivery, controlled release, and multifunctional material development.
Journal Article
Investment in vertical wrapper pays off
2005
\"It really has performed well,\" he says. \"And if I was to highlight one particular feature it would be the baler's ability to work equally well up hill and down hill. The transfer of the bale from the chamber to the wrapper unit is virtually failsafe.\"
Magazine Article