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- 2011 Annual Meeting
- Separations Division
- Theories and Applications of Cross Flow Filtration
- (484c) Cross-Flow Filtration of Plasma From Blood From a Microchannel
Recent experiments have correlated macroscopic measurements (filtration rates, transmembrane pressures) with direct observation of erythrocyte behavior at the filtering surface. At low filtration rates (low transmembrane pressures), erythrocytes roll across the filter surface, but at higher filtration rates (higher transmembrane pressures), erythrocytes are observed sticking to the sieve surface. Post-filtration SEM’s, even those obtained at very low transmembrane pressures, reveal significant capture and deformation of erythrocytes in the filter pores. Careful balances among sieve design (which can be precisely defined by photolithography), surface treatments of sieves, and flow conditions, allow filtration fluxes at rates exceeding 0.1 cm3/cm2-min.