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Top sheath flow-assisted secondary flow particle manipulation in microchannels with the slanted groove structure

Top sheath flow-assisted secondary flow particle manipulation in microchannels with the slanted groove structure
Top sheath flow-assisted secondary flow particle manipulation in microchannels with the slanted groove structure

In the regime of inertial microfluidics, the secondary flow is widely adopted to reduce the number of the equilibrium position and improve the focusing performance of particles. At the same time, secondary flow can also enhance the mixing effect and may deteriorate particle focusing due to the induced rotating streams, especially for the particle with a small size. In a double-layered microchannel with slanted groove structures, it has been demonstrated that the generated secondary flow at a high flow rate could focus the particle with a large size (> 8 µm). However, the manipulation of small-size particles (< 8 µm) was unsuccessful as the effects of secondary flow on the small-size particles were not strong enough. In this work, to manipulate the small-size particle, we proposed a scheme to utilize a top sheath flow to enhance the focusing efficiency of the structure-induced secondary flow. The effects of the total flow rate and the flow rate ratio between the sheath and sample flow were investigated comprehensively in a large range. The 4.8 µm particle could be manipulated effectively at different flow rates with the assistance of appropriate sheath flows. Besides, the effects of other factors, such as the quantity of the expansion groove structure, and particle concentration and size, on particle focusing performance were also investigated. We found that the particles with the diameter of 2.9 µm can also be effectively focused within the double-layered microchannel. Furthermore, we demonstrated the continuous plasma extraction from the undiluted whole blood using this proposed technique to validate its potential biological applications. The results show that the purity of plasma extracted could reach up to ~ 99% after a single process. As such, this demonstrated that sheath flow-assisted particle manipulating method can overcome the limitations of conventional design and offer much better performance for controlling smaller particles. Such a platform may enable great potential in the applications of biological and diagnostic assays, for bioparticles smaller than the normal cell size.

1613-4982
Zhao, Qianbin
4e956b7f-4fb6-42fa-9a3b-b9a7c3703493
Yuan, Dan
76b9b77e-dda5-4682-8db0-75bfad1d1258
Tang, Shi Yang
1d0f15c6-2a3e-4bad-a3d8-fc267db93ed4
Yun, Guolin
240c3dc9-c224-41c0-8740-de165d1eb90b
Yan, Sheng
1cf2968c-1639-4c47-a90b-481b86c441cb
Zhang, Jun
a4628c00-1e1c-4729-8d8a-e7619a2c1edf
Li, Weihua
e2555036-0e48-425a-afeb-db6ffba5238e
Zhao, Qianbin
4e956b7f-4fb6-42fa-9a3b-b9a7c3703493
Yuan, Dan
76b9b77e-dda5-4682-8db0-75bfad1d1258
Tang, Shi Yang
1d0f15c6-2a3e-4bad-a3d8-fc267db93ed4
Yun, Guolin
240c3dc9-c224-41c0-8740-de165d1eb90b
Yan, Sheng
1cf2968c-1639-4c47-a90b-481b86c441cb
Zhang, Jun
a4628c00-1e1c-4729-8d8a-e7619a2c1edf
Li, Weihua
e2555036-0e48-425a-afeb-db6ffba5238e

Zhao, Qianbin, Yuan, Dan, Tang, Shi Yang, Yun, Guolin, Yan, Sheng, Zhang, Jun and Li, Weihua (2019) Top sheath flow-assisted secondary flow particle manipulation in microchannels with the slanted groove structure. Microfluidics and Nanofluidics, 23 (1), [6]. (doi:10.1007/s10404-018-2174-x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In the regime of inertial microfluidics, the secondary flow is widely adopted to reduce the number of the equilibrium position and improve the focusing performance of particles. At the same time, secondary flow can also enhance the mixing effect and may deteriorate particle focusing due to the induced rotating streams, especially for the particle with a small size. In a double-layered microchannel with slanted groove structures, it has been demonstrated that the generated secondary flow at a high flow rate could focus the particle with a large size (> 8 µm). However, the manipulation of small-size particles (< 8 µm) was unsuccessful as the effects of secondary flow on the small-size particles were not strong enough. In this work, to manipulate the small-size particle, we proposed a scheme to utilize a top sheath flow to enhance the focusing efficiency of the structure-induced secondary flow. The effects of the total flow rate and the flow rate ratio between the sheath and sample flow were investigated comprehensively in a large range. The 4.8 µm particle could be manipulated effectively at different flow rates with the assistance of appropriate sheath flows. Besides, the effects of other factors, such as the quantity of the expansion groove structure, and particle concentration and size, on particle focusing performance were also investigated. We found that the particles with the diameter of 2.9 µm can also be effectively focused within the double-layered microchannel. Furthermore, we demonstrated the continuous plasma extraction from the undiluted whole blood using this proposed technique to validate its potential biological applications. The results show that the purity of plasma extracted could reach up to ~ 99% after a single process. As such, this demonstrated that sheath flow-assisted particle manipulating method can overcome the limitations of conventional design and offer much better performance for controlling smaller particles. Such a platform may enable great potential in the applications of biological and diagnostic assays, for bioparticles smaller than the normal cell size.

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More information

Published date: 1 January 2019
Additional Information: Funding Information: J. Zhang greatly acknowledges the support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant no. 51705257), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (Grant no. BK20170839), and the Griffith University-Peking University Collaborative Travel Grant (036 Research Internal). W. Li acknowledges the support from Australian Research Council Discovery Project (Grant no. 180100055). This work is partially supported by UOW-CSC Scholarship and Dr. Sheng Yan is the recipient of JSPS postdoctoral fellowship. Funding Information: Acknowledgements J. Zhang greatly acknowledges the support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant no. 51705257), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province (Grant no. BK20170839), and the Griffith University-Peking University Collaborative Travel Grant (036 Research Internal). W. Li acknowledges the support from Australian Research Council Discovery Project (Grant no. 180100055). This work is partially supported by UOW-CSC Scholarship and Dr. Sheng Yan is the recipient of JSPS postdoctoral fellowship. Publisher Copyright: © 2018, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481716
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481716
ISSN: 1613-4982
PURE UUID: 5409e1d1-ec43-454c-8b97-88f8e1c57bbb
ORCID for Shi Yang Tang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3079-8880

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Date deposited: 06 Sep 2023 16:50
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:13

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Contributors

Author: Qianbin Zhao
Author: Dan Yuan
Author: Shi Yang Tang ORCID iD
Author: Guolin Yun
Author: Sheng Yan
Author: Jun Zhang
Author: Weihua Li

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