4.8 Article

Development and Testing of a Continuous Flow-Electrical-Split-Flow Lateral Transport Thin Separation System (Fl-El-SPLITT)

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 5, Pages 2888-2897

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c04345

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NIGMS [R21-GM107894]
  2. NIH SBIR [HHSN261201600054C]
  3. Elsa U. Pardee Foundation
  4. University of Louisville Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology Faculty Start-up funds
  5. UofL COBRE NIGMS NIH [P20GM113226]

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A new high-volume, continuous particle separation device based on size and charge has been developed, showing improved particle separations over traditional devices. This new technique combines electrical and flow fields into a single device, streamlining high-throughput continuous separations based upon electrophoretic mobility.
In this work, a new high-volume, continuous particle separation device that separates based upon size and charge is described. Two continuous flow-electrical-split-flow lateral transport thin (Fl-El-SPLITT) device architectures (a platinum electrode on a porous membrane and a porous graphite electrode under a membrane) were developed and shown to improve particle separations over a purely electrical-SPLITT device. The graphite FL-El-SPLITT device architecture achieved the best separation of approximately 60% of small (28 nm) vs large (1000 nm) polystyrene particles. Fl-El-SPLITT (platinum) achieved a 75% separation on a single pass using these same particles. Fl-El-SPLITT (platinum) achieved a moderate 26% continuous separation of U87 glioma cell-derived small extracellular vesicles (EVs) from medium EVs. Control parameter testing showed that El-SPLITT continuously directed particle motility within a channel to exit a selected port based upon the applied voltage using either direct current or alternating current. The transition from one port to the other was dependent upon the voltage applied. Both large and small polystyrene particles transitioned together rather than separating at each of the applied voltages. These data present the first ever validation of El-SPLITT in continuous versus batch format. The Fl-El-SPLITT device architecture, monitoring, and electrical and fluid interfacing systems are described in detail for the first time. Capabilities afforded to the system by the flow addition include enhanced particle separation as well as the ability to filter out small particles or desalinate fluids. High-throughput continuous separations based upon electrophoretic mobility will be streamlined by this new technique that combines electrical and flow fields into a single device.

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