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High-throughput, temperature-controlled microchannel acoustophoresis device made with rapid prototyping

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Authors:
  • Adams, Jonathan D ;
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    University of California
  • Ebbesen, Christian L. ;
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    Technical University of Denmark
  • Barnkob, Rune ;
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    Department of Micro- and Nanotechnology, Technical University of Denmark
  • Yang, Allen H J ;
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    University of California
  • Soh, H Tom ;
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    University of California
  • Bruus, Henrik
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    Orcid logo0000-0001-5827-2939
    Department of Micro- and Nanotechnology, Technical University of Denmark
DOI:
10.1088/0960-1317/22/7/075017
Abstract:
We report a temperature-controlled microfluidic acoustophoresis device capable of separating particles and transferring blood cells from undiluted whole human blood at a volume throughput greater than 1 L h−1. The device is fabricated from glass substrates and polymer sheets in microscope-slide format using low-cost, rapid-prototyping techniques. This high-throughput acoustophoresis chip (HTAC) utilizes a temperature-stabilized, standing ultrasonic wave, which imposes differential acoustic radiation forces that can separate particles according to size, density and compressibility. The device proved capable of separating a mixture of 10- and 2-μm-diameter polystyrene beads with a sorting efficiency of 0.8 at a flow rate of 1 L h−1. As a first step toward biological applications, the HTAC was also tested in processing whole human blood and proved capable of transferring blood cells from undiluted whole human blood with an efficiency of 0.95 at 1 L h−1 and 0.82 at 2 L h−1.
Type:
Journal article
Language:
English
Published in:
Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, 2012, Vol 22, Issue 7
Main Research Area:
Science/technology
Publication Status:
Published
Review type:
Peer Review
Submission year:
2012
Scientific Level:
Scientific
ID:
227450507

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