4.8 Review

Microfluidic Devices for Bioapplications

Journal

SMALL
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 12-48

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.201000946

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP0985253, DP1092955]
  2. National Health & Medical Research Council [546238, 1000513]
  3. Defense Threat Reduction Agency [1-08-C-0016]
  4. Gates Foundation
  5. NSF-DBI [08566]
  6. Department of Prime Minister & Cabinet's Office of National Security
  7. Australian Research Council [DP1092955] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Harnessing the ability to precisely and reproducibly actuate fluids and manipulate bioparticles such as DNA, cells, and molecules at the microscale, microfluidics is a powerful tool that is currently revolutionizing chemical and biological analysis by replicating laboratory bench-top technology on a miniature chip-scale device, thus allowing assays to be carried out at a fraction of the time and cost while affording portability and field-use capability. Emerging from a decade of research and development in microfluidic technology are a wide range of promising laboratory and consumer biotechnological applications from microscale genetic and proteomic analysis kits, cell culture and manipulation platforms, biosensors, and pathogen detection systems to point-of-care diagnostic devices, high-throughput combinatorial drug screening platforms, schemes for targeted drug delivery and advanced therapeutics, and novel biomaterials synthesis for tissue engineering. The developments associated with these technological advances along with their respective applications to date are reviewed from a broad perspective and possible future directions that could arise from the current state of the art are discussed.

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