4.8 Article

Acousto-dielectric tweezers for size-insensitive manipulation and biophysical characterization of single cells

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2023.115061

Keywords

Acoustofluidics; Acousto-dielectric tweezers; Size -insensitive manipulation; Cell biophysical characterization

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This study presents acousto-dielectric tweezers that utilize surface acoustic waves and alternating current electric fields to apply controllable acoustophoretic and dielectrophoretic forces on cells, enabling the trapping and differentiation of cells based on their intrinsic biophysical properties. Experimental results demonstrate the potential applications of the mechanism in single-cell analysis, size-insensitive cell separation, and cell phenotyping.
The intrinsic biophysical properties of cells, such as mechanical, acoustic, and electrical properties, are valuable indicators of a cell's function and state. However, traditional single-cell biophysical characterization methods are hindered by limited measurable properties, time-consuming procedures, and complex system setups. This study presents acousto-dielectric tweezers that leverage the balance between controllable acoustophoretic and die-lectrophoretic forces applied on cells through surface acoustic waves and alternating current electric fields, respectively. Particularly, the balanced acoustophoretic and dielectrophoretic forces can trap cells at equilibrium positions independent of the cell size to differentiate between various cell-intrinsic mechanical, acoustic, and electrical properties. Experimental results show our mechanism has the potential for applications in single-cell analysis, size-insensitive cell separation, and cell phenotyping, which are all primarily based on cells' intrinsic biophysical properties. Our results also show the measured equilibrium position of a cell can inversely determine multiple biophysical properties, including membrane capacitance, cytoplasm conductivity, and acoustic contrast factor. With these features, our acousto-dielectric tweezing mechanism is a valuable addition to the resources available for biophysical property-based biological and medical research.

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