Biological analysis in an on-chip flow cytometry is predictable, which often works with small volumes of reagents. A microfluidic chip to mix and encapsulate both living cells and drug in picoliter aqueous drops is proposed. By the aid of a counter-flow unit and a T-junction, this chip can mix cells with drugs, and form them into droplets of liquid in the moving air flow to isolate different trails of samples and keep the cells alive for a fixed time before measuring. Some simulation work was performed for optimizing the chip design. The relation between droplet length and flow rate ratio was found for a frequency in the range of 25-100Hz. The major stability in the droplet formation is reached at Qd/Qc=1, which correspond to a droplet length of 160μm. Droplets are separate by 170μm of air bubbles. The study also proposes an analysis of the pressure variation in water and air inlet during a period of droplet generation. Typically, the pressure over 25% or 80% respectively of the max pressure would be reached. The non-clogging counter-flow microconcentrator is used to improve efficiency of mixing. Solutions of water with 0.3mol/dm3 and 0.15mol/dm3 of glucose (respectively 4% and 2% glucose in water) were mixed in the tests. For equal flow-rates (25×10-12 m3/s), it reaches a steady-state condition in the outlet with a concentration of 0.228mol/dm3. Since the droplets generator follows the micromixer in the chip, the outlet of micromixer is one of the inlets of the droplets generator. The size of the whole structure is less than 3mm, which allows them to be easily integrated into a developing flow-cytometry chip.

Cell-based digital microfluidic chip for drug mixing and droplets generation: Design and simulation / Dong, Tao; Molino, Matteo; Demarchi, Danilo. - ELETTRONICO. - (2012), pp. 726-730. (Intervento presentato al convegno 2012 5th International Conference on Biomedical Engineering and Informatics, BMEI 2012 tenutosi a Chongqing, China nel 16-18 Oct. 2012) [10.1109/BMEI.2012.6513008].

Cell-based digital microfluidic chip for drug mixing and droplets generation: Design and simulation

MOLINO, MATTEO;DEMARCHI, DANILO
2012

Abstract

Biological analysis in an on-chip flow cytometry is predictable, which often works with small volumes of reagents. A microfluidic chip to mix and encapsulate both living cells and drug in picoliter aqueous drops is proposed. By the aid of a counter-flow unit and a T-junction, this chip can mix cells with drugs, and form them into droplets of liquid in the moving air flow to isolate different trails of samples and keep the cells alive for a fixed time before measuring. Some simulation work was performed for optimizing the chip design. The relation between droplet length and flow rate ratio was found for a frequency in the range of 25-100Hz. The major stability in the droplet formation is reached at Qd/Qc=1, which correspond to a droplet length of 160μm. Droplets are separate by 170μm of air bubbles. The study also proposes an analysis of the pressure variation in water and air inlet during a period of droplet generation. Typically, the pressure over 25% or 80% respectively of the max pressure would be reached. The non-clogging counter-flow microconcentrator is used to improve efficiency of mixing. Solutions of water with 0.3mol/dm3 and 0.15mol/dm3 of glucose (respectively 4% and 2% glucose in water) were mixed in the tests. For equal flow-rates (25×10-12 m3/s), it reaches a steady-state condition in the outlet with a concentration of 0.228mol/dm3. Since the droplets generator follows the micromixer in the chip, the outlet of micromixer is one of the inlets of the droplets generator. The size of the whole structure is less than 3mm, which allows them to be easily integrated into a developing flow-cytometry chip.
2012
9781467311816
9781467311816
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2646260
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