4.7 Article

Selective particle and cell capture in a continuous flow using micro-vortex acoustic streaming

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages 1769-1777

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7lc00215g

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Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 2 [T2MOE1603]
  2. National Medical Research Council (NMRC) grant of Young Individual Award, National Research Foundation (NRF), Prime Minister's Office, Singapore, under CREATE, Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART

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Acoustic streaming has emerged as a promising technique for refined microscale manipulation, where strong rotational flow can give rise to particle and cell capture. In contrast to hydrodynamically generated vortices, acoustic streaming is rapidly tunable, highly scalable and requires no external pressure source. Though streaming is typically ignored or minimized in most acoustofluidic systems that utilize other acoustofluidic effects, we maximize the effect of acoustic streaming in a continuous flow using a highfrequency (381 MHz), narrow-beam focused surface acoustic wave. This results in rapid fluid streaming, with velocities orders of magnitude greater than that of the lateral flow, to generate fluid vortices that extend the entire width of a 400 mu m wide microfluidic channel. We characterize the forces relevant for vortex formation in a combined streaming/lateral flow system, and use these acoustic streaming vortices to selectively capture 2 mu m from a mixed suspension with 1 mu m particles and human breast adenocarcinoma cells (MDA-231) from red blood cells.

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