Publication | Open Access
Modulation of rotation-induced lift force for cell filtration in a low aspect ratio microchannel
25
Citations
53
References
2014
Year
EngineeringFluid MechanicsFlow CellBiofabricationRotation-induced Lift ForceOrgan-on-a-chipBiomedical EngineeringTwo-stage Inertial MigrationCell-substrate InteractionsCancer EngineeringMicroscale SystemMicrofluidicsHydrodynamic Inertial MigrationBiofluid DynamicBiophysicsBiomedical AnalysisCell FiltrationMicrofabricationLab-on-a-chipBiomemsMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Cell filtration is a critical step in sample preparation in many bioapplications. Herein, we report on a simple, filter-free, microfluidic platform based on hydrodynamic inertial migration. Our approach builds on the concept of two-stage inertial migration which permits precise prediction of microparticle position within the microchannel. Our design manipulates equilibrium positions of larger microparticles by modulating rotation-induced lift force in a low aspect ratio microchannel. Here, we demonstrate filtration of microparticles with extreme efficiency (>99%). Using multiple prostate cell lines (LNCaP and human prostate epithelial tumor cells), we show filtration from spiked blood, with 3-fold concentration and >83% viability. Results of a proliferation assay show normal cell division and suggest no negative effects on intrinsic properties. Considering the planar low-aspect-ratio structure and predictable focusing, we envision promising applications and easy integration with existing lab-on-a-chip systems.
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