4.8 Article

Soft-Contact Acoustic Microgripper Based on a Controllable Gas-Liquid Interface for Biomicromanipulations

Journal

SMALL
Volume 17, Issue 49, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/smll.202104579

Keywords

acoustic tweezers; acoustofluidics; biomicromanipulation; cell transportation and rotation; gas-liquid interface

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NNSFC) [51605136490, 51505123]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [491 2016 M600180]
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province [E2017202248, E2015202194]

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A soft-contact acoustic microgripper is introduced for handling microparticles to improve interaction safety, demonstrating effectiveness and noninvasiveness through experiments with microbeads and zebrafish embryos.
The manipulation of microscale bioentities is desired in many biological and biomedical applications. However, the potential unobservable damage to bioparticles due to rigid contact has always been a source of concern. Herein, a soft-contact acoustic microgripper to handle microparticles to improve the interaction safety is introduced. The system takes advantage of the acoustic-enhanced adhesion of flexible gas-liquid interfaces to capture-release, transport, and rotate the target, such as microbeads (20-65 mu m) and zebrafish embryos (from 950 mu m to 1.4 mm). The gas-liquid interface generated at the tip of a microcapillary can be precisely controlled by a pneumatic pressure source. The gas-liquid interface oscillation excited by acoustic energy imposes coupled radiation force and drag force on the microparticles, enabling multidimensional movements. Experiments with the microbeads are conducted to evaluate the claimed function and quantify the key parameters that influence the manipulation result. Additionally, 250 zebrafish embryos are captured, transported, and rotated. The hatching rate of the 250 manipulated embryos is approximately 98% similar to that of the nonmanipulated group, which proves the noninvasiveness of the method. The derived theories and experimental data indicate that the developed soft-contact microgripper is functional and beneficial for biological and medical applications.

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