141 research outputs found

    Electrokinetic motion of single nanoparticles in single PDMS nanochannels

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10404-017-1848-0Electrokinetic motion of single nanoparticles in single nanochannels was studied systematically by image tracking method. A novel method to fabricate PDMS-glass micro/nanochannel chips with single nanochannels was presented. The effects of ionic concentration of the buffer solution, particle-to-channel size ratio and electric field on the electrokinetic velocity of fluorescent nanoparticles were studied. The experimental results show that the apparent velocity of nanoparticles in single nanochannels increases with the ionic concentration when the ionic concentration is low and decreases with the ionic concentration when the concentration is high. The apparent velocity decreases with the particle-to-channel size ratio (a/b). Under the condition of low electric fields, nanoparticles can hardly move in single nanochannels with a large particle-to-channel size ratio. Generally, the apparent velocity increases with the applied electric field linearly. The experimental study presented in this article is valuable for future research and applications of transport and manipulation of nanoparticles in nanofluidic devices, such as separation of charged nanoparticles and DNA molecules

    DSMC investigation of rarefied gas flow through diverging micro- and nanochannels

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    Direct simulation Monte Carlo (DSMC) method with simplified Bernoulli-trials (SBT) collision scheme has been used to study the rarefied pressure-driven nitrogen flow through diverging microchannels. The fluid behaviours flowing between two plates with different divergence angles ranging between 0^{\circ} to 17^{\circ} are described at different pressure ratios (1.5{\le}{\prod}{\le}2.5) and Knudsen numbers (0.03{\le}Kn{\le}12.7). The primary flow field properties, including pressure, velocity, and temperature, are presented for divergent microchannels and are compared with those of a microchannel with a uniform cross-section. The variations of the flow field properties in divergent microchannels, which are influenced by the area change, the channel pressure ratio and the rarefication are discussed. The results show no flow separation in divergent microchannels for all the range of simulation parameters studied in the present work. It has been found that a divergent channel can carry higher amounts of mass in comparison with an equivalent straight channel geometry. A correlation between the mass flow rate through microchannels, the divergence angle, the pressure ratio, and the Knudsen number has been suggested. The present numerical findings prove the occurrence of Knudsen minimum phenomenon in micro- and Nano- channels with non-uniform cross-sections.Comment: Accepted manuscript; 25 Pages and 11 Figures; "Microfluidics and Nanofluidics

    Asymmetric Membrane for Digital Detection of Single Bacteria in Milliliters of Complex Water Samples

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    In this work, we introduce an asymmetric membrane as a simple and robust nanofluidic platform for digital detection of single pathogenic bacteria directly in 10 mL of unprocessed environmental water samples. The asymmetric membrane, consisting of uniform micropores on one side and a high density of vertically aligned nanochannels on the other side, was prepared within 1 min by a facile method. The single membrane covers all the processing steps from sample concentration, purification, and partition to final digital loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP). By simple filtration, bacteria were enriched and partitioned inside the micropores, while inhibitors typically found in the environmental samples (i.e., proteins, heavy metals, and organics) were washed away through the nanochannels. Meanwhile, large particles, indigenous plankton, and positively charged pollutants in the samples were excluded by using a sacrificial membrane stacked on top. After initial filtration, modified LAMP reagents, including NaF and lysozyme, were loaded onto the membrane. Each pore in the asymmetric membrane functioned as an individual nanoreactor for selective, rapid, and efficient isothermal amplification of single bacteria, generating a bright fluorescence for direct counting. Even though high levels of inhibitors were present, absolute quantification of Escherichia coli and Salmonella directly in an unprocessed environmental sample (seawater and pond water) was achieved within 1 h, with sensitivity down to single cell and a dynamic range of 0.3–10000 cells/mL. The simple and low-cost analysis platform described herein has an enormous potential for the detection of pathogens, exosomes, stem cells, and viruses as well as single-cell heterogeneity analysis in environmental, food, and clinical research
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