4.6 Article

Deep-Learning Based Estimation of Dielectrophoretic Force

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi13010041

Keywords

dielectrophoretic (DEP); AlexNet; MobileNetV2; VGG19; neural network; textile electrode; pearl chain; convolutional neural networks (CNN); force

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [2100930]
  2. Directorate For Engineering
  3. Div Of Electrical, Commun & Cyber Sys [2100930] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study combines a textile electrode-based DEP sensing system with deep learning to accurately estimate the DEP forces on micro particles. By training three deep convolutional neural networks, the researchers demonstrate that their deep learning model is capable of processing micrographs and accurately estimating the DEP forces. The method shows robustness in unfavorable real-world settings and can be used for direct estimation of dielectrophoretic force in point-of-care settings.
The ability to accurately quantify dielectrophoretic (DEP) force is critical in the development of high-efficiency microfluidic systems. This is the first reported work that combines a textile electrode-based DEP sensing system with deep learning in order to estimate the DEP forces invoked on microparticles. We demonstrate how our deep learning model can process micrographs of pearl chains of polystyrene (PS) microbeads to estimate the DEP forces experienced. Numerous images obtained from our experiments at varying input voltages were preprocessed and used to train three deep convolutional neural networks, namely AlexNet, MobileNetV2, and VGG19. The performances of all the models was tested for their validation accuracies. Models were also tested with adversarial images to evaluate performance in terms of classification accuracy and resilience as a result of noise, image blur, and contrast changes. The results indicated that our method is robust under unfavorable real-world settings, demonstrating that it can be used for the direct estimation of dielectrophoretic force in point-of-care settings.

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