4.6 Article

Hand-powered ultralow-cost paper centrifuge

Journal

NATURE BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume 1, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41551-016-0009

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Funding

  1. Stanford School of Medicine Dean's Postdoctoral Fellowship
  2. Pew Foundation
  3. Moore Foundation
  4. National Science Foundation Career Award
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) New Innovator Award
  6. Stanford Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) [UL1 TR001085]

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In a global-health context, commercial centrifuges are expensive, bulky and electricity-powered, and thus constitute a critical bottleneck in the development of decentralized, battery-free point-of-care diagnostic devices. Here, we report an ultralow-cost (20 cents), lightweight (2 g), human-powered paper centrifuge (which we name 'paperfuge') designed on the basis of a theoretical model inspired by the fundamental mechanics of an ancient whirligig (or buzzer toy; 3,300 bc). The paperfuge achieves speeds of 125,000 r.p.m. (and equivalent centrifugal forces of 30,000 g), with theoretical limits predicting 1,000,000 r.p.m. We demonstrate that the paperfuge can separate pure plasma from whole blood in less than 1.5 min, and isolate malaria parasites in 15 min. We also show that paperfuge-like centrifugal microfluidic devices can be made of polydimethylsiloxane, plastic and 3D-printed polymeric materials. Ultracheap, power-free centrifuges should open up opportunities for point-of-care diagnostics in resource-poor settings and for applications in science education and field ecology.

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