16,905 research outputs found
Human Blood Cell Sensing with Platinum Black Electroplated Impedance Sensor
AC impedance sensing is an important method for biological cell analysis in flow cytometry. For micro impedance cell sensors, downsizing electrodes increases the double layer impedance of the metal-electrolyte interface, thus leaves no sensing zone in frequency domain and reduces the sensitivity significantly. We proposed using platinum black electroplated electrodes to solve the problem. In this paper, using this technique we demonstrated human blood cell sensing with high signal to noise ratio
A handheld high-sensitivity micro-NMR CMOS platform with B-field stabilization for multi-type biological/chemical assays
We report a micro-nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) system compatible with multi-type biological/chemical lab-on-a-chip assays. Unified in a handheld scale (dimension: 14 x 6 x 11 cm³, weight: 1.4 kg), the system is capable to detect<100 pM of Enterococcus faecalis derived DNA from a 2.5 μL sample. The key components are a portable magnet (0.46 T, 1.25 kg) for nucleus magnetization, a system PCB for I/O interface, an FPGA for system control, a current driver for trimming the magnetic (B) field, and a silicon chip fabricated in 0.18 μm CMOS. The latter, integrated with a current-mode vertical Hall sensor and a low-noise readout circuit, facilitates closed-loop B-field stabilization (2 mT → 0.15 mT), which otherwise fluctuates with temperature or sample displacement. Together with a dynamic-B-field transceiver with a planar coil for micro-NMR assay and thermal control, the system demonstrates: 1) selective biological target pinpointing; 2) protein state analysis; and 3) solvent-polymer dynamics, suitable for healthcare, food and colloidal applications, respectively. Compared to a commercial NMR-assay product (Bruker mq-20), this platform greatly reduces the sample consumption (120x), hardware volume (175x), and weight (96x)
Ultimate and practical limits of fluid-based mass detection with suspended microchannel resonators
Suspended microchannel resonators (SMRs) are an innovative approach to fluid-based
microelectromechanical mass sensing that circumvents complete immersion of the sensor. By
embedding the fluidics within the device itself, vacuum-based operation of the resonator becomes
possible. This enables frequency shift-based mass detection with high quality factors, and hence
sensitivity comparable to vacuum-based micromechanical resonators. Here we present a detailed
analysis of the sensitivity of these devices, including consideration of fundamental and practical
noise limits, and the important role of binding kinetics in sensing.We demonstrate that these devices
show significant promise for protein detection. For larger, biologically-important targets such as rare
whole virions, the required analysis time to flow sufficient sample through the sensor can become
prohibitively long unless large parallel arrays of sensors or preconcentrators are employed
MEMS flow sensors for nano-fluidic applications
This paper presents micromachined thermal sensors for measuring liquid flow rates in the nanoliter-per-minute range. The sensors use a boron-doped polysilicon thinfilm heater that is embedded in the silicon nitride wall of a microchannel. The boron doping is chosen to increase the heater’s temperature coefficient of resistance within tolerable noise limits, and the microchannel is suspended from the substrate to improve thermal isolation. The sensors have demonstrated a flow rate resolution below 10 nL/min, as well as the capability for detecting micro bubbles in the liquid. Heat transfer simulation has also been performed to explain the sensor operation and yielded good agreement with experimental data
Sub-pixel resolving optofluidic microscope for on-chip cell imaging
We report the implementation of a fully on-chip, lensless, sub-pixel resolving optofluidic microscope (SROFM). The device utilizes microfluidic flow to deliver specimens directly across a complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) sensor to generate a sequence of low-resolution (LR) projection images, where resolution is limited by the sensor's pixel size. This image sequence is then processed with a pixel super-resolution algorithm to reconstruct a single high resolution (HR) image, where features beyond the Nyquist rate of the LR images are resolved. We demonstrate the device's capabilities by imaging microspheres, protist Euglena gracilis, and Entamoeba invadens cysts with sub-cellular resolution and establish that our prototype has a resolution limit of 0.75 microns. Furthermore, we also apply the same pixel super-resolution algorithm to reconstruct HR videos in which the dynamic interaction between the fluid and the sample, including the in-plane and out-of-plane rotation of the sample within the flow, can be monitored in high resolution. We believe that the powerful combination of both the pixel super-resolution and optofluidic microscopy techniques within our SROFM is a significant step forwards toward a simple, cost-effective, high throughput and highly compact imaging solution for biomedical and bioscience needs
Optical imaging techniques in microfluidics and their applications
Microfluidic devices have undergone rapid development in recent years and provide a lab-on-a-chip solution for many biomedical and chemical applications. Optical imaging techniques are essential in microfluidics for observing and extracting information from biological or chemical samples. Traditionally, imaging in microfluidics is achieved by bench-top conventional microscopes or other bulky imaging systems. More recently, many novel compact microscopic techniques have been developed to provide a low-cost and portable solution. In this review, we provide an overview of optical imaging techniques used in microfluidics followed with their applications. We first discuss bulky imaging systems including microscopes and interferometer-based techniques, then we focus on compact imaging systems that can be better integrated with microfluidic devices, including digital in-line holography and scanning-based imaging techniques. The applications in biomedicine or chemistry are also discussed along with the specific imaging techniques
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Hydrodynamic characterisation of layered herringbone microchannels
This paper was presented at the 2nd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2009), which was held at Brunel University, West London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, IPEM, the Italian Union of Thermofluid dynamics, the Process Intensification Network, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group and the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications.The performance of a layered herringbone microstructured channel is compared with the staggered herringbone micromixer (SHM) originally proposed by Stroock et al. (2002). The layered configuration uses a single set of herringbone structures for two adjacent channels. Mixing and residence time distributions (RTDs) are studied both theoretically, via computational fluid dynamics and particle tracking algorithms, and experimentally. Experimental RTD measurements were performed by monitoring the concentration of a tracer dye by means of a LED-photodiode system. The proposed layered design gives similar results in terms
of mixing and RTD as the standard SHM and it outperforms the behaviour of a rectangular channel
An Efficient, Movable Single-Particle Detector for Use in Cryogenic Ultra-High Vacuum Environments
A compact, highly efficient single-particle counting detector for ions of
keV/u kinetic energy, movable by a long-stroke mechanical translation stage,
has been developed at the Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Kernphysik (Max Planck
Institute for Nuclear Physics, MPIK). Both, detector and translation mechanics,
can operate at ambient temperatures down to 10 K and consist fully of
ultra-high vacuum (UHV) compatible, high-temperature bakeable and non-magnetic
materials. The set-up is designed to meet the technical demands of MPIK's
Cryogenic Storage Ring (CSR). We present a series of functional tests that
demonstrate full suitability for this application and characterise the set-up
with regard to its particle detection efficiency.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, version accepted for publication in Review of
Scientific Instrument
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