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Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel

Inertial microfluidics uses the intrinsic fluid inertia in confined channels to manipulate the particles and cells in a simple, high-throughput, and precise manner. Inertial focusing in a straight channel results in several equilibrium positions within the cross sections. Introducing channel curvatu...

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Autores principales: Cha, Haotian, Dai, Yuchen, Hansen, Helena H. W. B., Ouyang, Lingxi, Chen, Xiangxun, Kang, Xiaoyue, An, Hongjie, Ta, Hang Thu, Nguyen, Nam-Trung, Zhang, Jun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AAAS 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10278993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37342212
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/cbsystems.0036
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author Cha, Haotian
Dai, Yuchen
Hansen, Helena H. W. B.
Ouyang, Lingxi
Chen, Xiangxun
Kang, Xiaoyue
An, Hongjie
Ta, Hang Thu
Nguyen, Nam-Trung
Zhang, Jun
author_facet Cha, Haotian
Dai, Yuchen
Hansen, Helena H. W. B.
Ouyang, Lingxi
Chen, Xiangxun
Kang, Xiaoyue
An, Hongjie
Ta, Hang Thu
Nguyen, Nam-Trung
Zhang, Jun
author_sort Cha, Haotian
collection PubMed
description Inertial microfluidics uses the intrinsic fluid inertia in confined channels to manipulate the particles and cells in a simple, high-throughput, and precise manner. Inertial focusing in a straight channel results in several equilibrium positions within the cross sections. Introducing channel curvature and adjusting the cross-sectional aspect ratio and shape can modify inertial focusing positions and can reduce the number of equilibrium positions. In this work, we introduce an innovative way to adjust the inertial focusing and reduce equilibrium positions by embedding asymmetrical obstacle microstructures. We demonstrated that asymmetrical concave obstacles could break the symmetry of original inertial focusing positions, resulting in unilateral focusing. In addition, we characterized the influence of obstacle size and 3 asymmetrical obstacle patterns on unilateral inertial focusing. Finally, we applied differential unilateral focusing on the separation of 10- and 15-μm particles and isolation of brain cancer cells (U87MG) from white blood cells (WBCs), respectively. The results indicated an excellent cancer cell recovery of 96.4% and WBC rejection ratio of 98.81%. After single processing, the purity of the cancer cells was dramatically enhanced from 1.01% to 90.13%, with an 89.24-fold enrichment. We believe that embedding asymmetric concave micro-obstacles is a new strategy to achieve unilateral inertial focusing and separation in curved channels.
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spelling pubmed-102789932023-06-20 Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel Cha, Haotian Dai, Yuchen Hansen, Helena H. W. B. Ouyang, Lingxi Chen, Xiangxun Kang, Xiaoyue An, Hongjie Ta, Hang Thu Nguyen, Nam-Trung Zhang, Jun Cyborg Bionic Syst Research Article Inertial microfluidics uses the intrinsic fluid inertia in confined channels to manipulate the particles and cells in a simple, high-throughput, and precise manner. Inertial focusing in a straight channel results in several equilibrium positions within the cross sections. Introducing channel curvature and adjusting the cross-sectional aspect ratio and shape can modify inertial focusing positions and can reduce the number of equilibrium positions. In this work, we introduce an innovative way to adjust the inertial focusing and reduce equilibrium positions by embedding asymmetrical obstacle microstructures. We demonstrated that asymmetrical concave obstacles could break the symmetry of original inertial focusing positions, resulting in unilateral focusing. In addition, we characterized the influence of obstacle size and 3 asymmetrical obstacle patterns on unilateral inertial focusing. Finally, we applied differential unilateral focusing on the separation of 10- and 15-μm particles and isolation of brain cancer cells (U87MG) from white blood cells (WBCs), respectively. The results indicated an excellent cancer cell recovery of 96.4% and WBC rejection ratio of 98.81%. After single processing, the purity of the cancer cells was dramatically enhanced from 1.01% to 90.13%, with an 89.24-fold enrichment. We believe that embedding asymmetric concave micro-obstacles is a new strategy to achieve unilateral inertial focusing and separation in curved channels. AAAS 2023-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10278993/ /pubmed/37342212 http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/cbsystems.0036 Text en Copyright © 2023 Haotian Cha et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Exclusive licensee Beijing Institute of Technology Press. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY 4.0) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Cha, Haotian
Dai, Yuchen
Hansen, Helena H. W. B.
Ouyang, Lingxi
Chen, Xiangxun
Kang, Xiaoyue
An, Hongjie
Ta, Hang Thu
Nguyen, Nam-Trung
Zhang, Jun
Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel
title Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel
title_full Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel
title_fullStr Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel
title_full_unstemmed Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel
title_short Asymmetrical Obstacles Enable Unilateral Inertial Focusing and Separation in Sinusoidal Microchannel
title_sort asymmetrical obstacles enable unilateral inertial focusing and separation in sinusoidal microchannel
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10278993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37342212
http://dx.doi.org/10.34133/cbsystems.0036
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