4.7 Article

Controlling water transport between micelles and aqueous microdroplets during sample enrichment

Journal

ANALYTICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 1149, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aca.2021.338212

Keywords

Droplet microfluidics; Sample enrichment; Spontaneous emulsification; Surfactant

Funding

  1. JST/PRESTO research program [JPMJPR15F9]
  2. KAKENHI funding program [16K17503]
  3. Dynamic Alliance for Open Innovation Bridging Human, Environment and Materials research program from the Network Joint Research Center for Materials and Devices
  4. Tohoku University Center for Gender Equality Promotion (TUMUG) Support Project (Project to Promote Gender Equality and Female Researchers)
  5. JSPS-RFBR Japan-Russia Research Cooperative Program [16-53-50027]

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The technique of deterministically enriching substances in droplets by controlling water transport has the potential to be a powerful pretreatment method for bioassays in droplet microfluidics.
Droplet microfluidics technologies have advanced rapidly, but enrichment in droplets has still been difficult. To deterministically control the droplet enrichment, the water transport from an aqueous microdroplet in organic continuous phase containing span 80 micelles was investigated. Organic phase containing Span-80-micelles contacted a NaCl aqueous solution to control hydration degree of the micelles, prior to being used in the microfluidic device. Then, the organic phase was continuously applied to the microdroplets trappled in microwells. Here, water was transported from the microdroplet to the organic phase micelles. This spontaneous emulsification process induced the droplet shrinkage and stopped when the microdroplet reached a certain diameter. The micelle hydration degree correlated well with the final water activity of droplets. The enrichment factor can be determined by the initial microdroplet salt concentration and by the micelle hydration degree. As a proof-of-concept experiment, enrichment of fluorescent nanoparticles and dye was demonstrated, and fluorescent resonance energy transfer was observed as expected. Another demonstration of bound-free separation was performed utilizing the avidin-biotin system. This technique has the potential to be a powerful pretreatment method for bioassays in droplet microfluidics. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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