2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(63a) A Continuous Microfluidic Blood/Plasma Separation Unit with Electrokinetic Stirring and Cross-Flow
Authors
A conceptually simple technique of removing the blood cells is to filter them out using porous structure such as a monolith. However, in a dead-end filtration mode, the pores get clogged after a very short time, and the device fails. In our system, a porous monolith is placed in the vertical arm of a T-junction network right next to the intersection of the two arms. Through one end of the horizontal arm, suspension (blood with cells) is introduced at a controlled flow rate. Through the other end of the horizontal arm, suspension is withdrawn at a controlled flow rate. The key is that that latter (withdrawal) flowrate is smaller than the former (infusion) flowrate and the balance is made up by the flow of filtrate (plasma) through the porous monolith and down the vertical arm of the T channel network.
This system is able to operate much longer than dead-end filtration systems because the blood cells excluded at the filter are swept away by the cross-flow of the fluid. Additionally, patterned electrodes at the junction are used to induce an AC electro-osmotic flow that drives the cells excluded by the filter towards the center of the cross-flow, and thereby enables the device to operate for hours without failure.