2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(288f) Continuous-Flow Dielectrophoretic Particle Sorting in Ridged Polymeric Microchannels
Authors
This design leads to straight forward modeling and robust operation. The fabrication method is compatible with injection-molding and, because no microelectrodes are required, is insensitive to electrode fouling or bubble generation. Surface chemistry modification is straight forward allowing for device characterization using a well understood liquid-solid interface. The design methodology allows for facile modeling of different ridge geometries via solution of the electromagnetic field equations. This design further shows potential for rapid particle sorting because particle deflections occur over small (~100 micron) spatial scales and rapid (<1s) time scales.
This device's novel architecture was used to spatially separate particles in continuous flow. Fluorescence microscopy was used to observe dielectrophoretic phenomena in these systems during the flow of cells over patterned surfaces. Precise control over cellular deflection was demonstrated through tuning of the externally applied electric field. Results from separations of polystyrene microspheres of different mobilities will be presented. Deflection was demonstrated at fields as low as 30 V/cm, an order of magnitude lower than previously-reported systems, allowing for applications with solutions at physiological salinity.