4.7 Article

Acoustic levitation and rotation of thin films and their application for room temperature protein crystallography

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09167-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Innosuisse [18726.2]
  2. leadXpro AG
  3. SLS TT AG
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_179351, 200021_192772]
  5. European Union [101004728, 701647]
  6. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_179351] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Acoustic levitation plays a crucial role in chemical and biochemical analysis, but loading high viscosity samples is challenging. By using polymer thin films as sample holders and studying their acoustic levitation and rotation, it is possible to achieve controlled rotation and positional stability for the samples.
Acoustic levitation has attracted attention in terms of chemical and biochemical analysis in combination with various analytical methods because of its unique container-less environment for samples that is not reliant on specific material characteristics. However, loading samples with very high viscosity is difficult. To expand the scope, we propose the use of polymer thin films as sample holders, whereby the sample is dispensed on a film that is subsequently loaded onto an acoustic levitator. When applied for protein crystallography experiments, rotation controllability and positional stability are important prerequisites. We therefore study the acoustic levitation and rotation of thin films with an aspect ratio (the diameter-to-thickness ratio) of 80-240, which is an order of magnitude larger than those reported previously. For films with empirically optimized shapes, we find that it is possible to control the rotation speed in the range of 1-4 rotations per second while maintaining a positional stability of 12 +/- 5 mu m. The acoustic radiation force acting on the films is found to be a factor of 26-30 higher than that for same-volume water droplets. We propose use cases of the developed films for protein crystallography experiments and demonstrate data collections for large single crystal samples at room temperature.

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