314 research outputs found
Microfluidic device to measure the speed of C. elegans using the resistance change of the flexible electrode
This work presents a novel method to assess the condition of Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) through a resistance measurement of its undulatory locomotion speed inside a micro channel. As the worm moves over the electrode inside the micro channel, the length of the electrode changes, consequently behaving like a strain gauge. In this paper, the electrotaxis was applied for controlling the direction of motion of C. elegans as an external stimulus, resulting in the worm moving towards the cathode of the circuit. To confirm the proposed measurement method, a microfluidic device was developed that employs a sinusoidal channel and a thin polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) layer with an electrode. The PDMS layer maintains a porous structure to enable the flexibility of the electrode. In this study, 6 measurements were performed to obtain the speed of an early adult stage C. elegans, where the measured average speed was 0.35 (±0.05) mm/s. The results of this work demonstrate the application of our method to measure the speed of C. elegans undulatory locomotion. This novel approach can be applied to make such measurements without an imaging system, and more importantly, allows directly to detect the locomotion of C. elegans using an electrical signal (i.e., the change in resistance)
Advanced Microfluidic Assays for Caenorhabditis elegans
The in vivo analysis of a model organism, such as the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, enables fundamental biomedical studies, including development, genetics, and neurobiology. In recent years, microfluidics technology has emerged as an attractive and enabling tool for the study of the multicellular organism. Advances in the application of microfluidics to C. elegans assays facilitate the manipulation of nematodes in high-throughput format and allow for the precise spatial and temporal control of their environment. In this chapter, we aim to illustrate the current microfluidic approaches for the investigation of behavior and neurobiology in C. elegans and discuss the trends of future development
Micro-electro-opto-fluidic systems for biomedical drug screening and electromagnetic filtering and cloaking applications
Microfluidic is a multidisciplinary field that deals with the flow of liquid inside micro-meter size channels. In order to be considered as microfluidics, at least one dimension of the channel should be in the range of one micrometer or sub-millimeter. Microfluidic technology includes designing, manufacturing, formulating devices and processing the liquid. As numerous bio-science and engineering techniques have utilized microfluidics and highly integrated with this remarkable technology, the microfluidic platform technology has extended to several sub-techs: micro-scale analysis, soft-lithography fabrication, polymer science and processing, on-chip sensing and micro-scale fluid manipulation. Those sub-techs have been developed rapidly along with the booming microfluidics.
The advance of those techniques has promoted microfluidic system diverse and widespread applications. Some examples that employ this technology include on-chip drug screening, micro-scale analysis, flexible electronics, biochemical assays. Many engineering field, such as optics, electronics, chemicals and electromagnetics, have been integrated with the microfluidic system to form a completed system for sensing, analyzing or realizing some specific applications.
Through the fusion of those technologies with microfluidics, many emerging technologies are well initiated, such as optofluidics and electrofluidics. Despite of rapid advancement of each parent technology field, those intersected technologies are still in their infancy and many technological elements and even some fundamental concepts are just now being developed. Thus, it provides great opportunity to explore more about those emerging technologies. Some particular areas that mainly interest researchers including cost deduction, effective fabrication, highly integration, portability and applicability. Due to the wide and diversity nature of the microfluidic technology and numerous combinations from the integration with other fields, it is very difficult to choose a single aspect or particular subject to research. Hence, we would like to focus on the application orientated microfluidic techniques that integrated with other engineering areas, in particular optics and electronics. Correspondingly, I will present four microfluidic platforms that integrated with optics, electronics for different application purpose.
First of all, fiber-optics was integrated into a microfluidic device to detect muscular force generation of microscopic nematodes. The integrated opto-fluidic device is capable of measuring the muscular force of nematode worms normal to the translational movement direction with high sensitivity, high data reliability, and simple device structure. The ability to quantify the muscular forces of small nematode worms will provide a new approach for screening mutants at single animal resolution.
Secondly, electronic grids were integrated into a microfluidic chip to realize on-chip tracking of nematode locomotion. The micro-electro-fluidic approach is capable of real-time lens-less and image-sensor-less monitoring of the locomotion of microscopic nematodes. The technology showed promise for overcoming the constraint of the limited field of view of conventional optical microscopy, with relatively low cost, good spatial resolution, and high portability.
Thirdly, electromagnetic spit ring resonator (SRR) structure was adopted as microfluidic channel filled with liquid metal to fabricate a tunable microfluidic microwave electronics called meta-atom. The presented meta-atom is capable of tuning its electromagnetic (EM) response characteristics over a broad frequency range via simple mechanical stretching. The meta-atom in this study presents a simple but effective building block for realizing mechanically tunable metamaterials.
Finally, based on the meta-atom we previously developed, an array of electromagnetic SRR shaped microfluidic channels filled with liquid metal to form a flexible metamaterial-based microwave electronic âskinâ or meta-skin. When stretched, the meta-skin performs as a tunable frequency selective surface with a wide resonance frequency tuning range. When wrapped around a curved dielectric material, the meta-skin functions as a flexible âcloakingâ surface to significantly suppress scattering from the surface of the dielectric material along different directions.
The microfluidic platform will find great applications when it integrates with other technologies. The development of such integration will greatly intersect different research areas and benefit all of the intersected technologies and fields, thus broadening the future applications
Recent advances in non-optical microfluidic platforms for bioparticle detection
The effective analysis of the basic structure and functional information of bioparticles are of great significance for the early diagnosis of diseases. The synergism between microfluidics and particle manipulation/detection technologies offers enhanced system integration capability and test accuracy for the detection of various bioparticles. Most microfluidic detection platforms are based on optical strategies such as fluorescence, absorbance, and image recognition. Although optical microfluidic platforms have proven their capabilities in the practical clinical detection of bioparticles, shortcomings such as expensive components and whole bulky devices have limited their practicality in the development of point-of-care testing (POCT) systems to be used in remote and underdeveloped areas. Therefore, there is an urgent need to develop cost-effective non-optical microfluidic platforms for bioparticle detection that can act as alternatives to optical counterparts. In this review, we first briefly summarise passive and active methods for bioparticle manipulation in microfluidics. Then, we survey the latest progress in non-optical microfluidic strategies based on electrical, magnetic, and acoustic techniques for bioparticle detection. Finally, a perspective is offered, clarifying challenges faced by current non-optical platforms in developing practical POCT devices and clinical applications.</p
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Point of Care Diagnostics and Health Monitoring Devices
Existing disease screening methods mostly rely on symptom based diagnosis. This is mainly because of lack of accessibility and cost associated with the tests. Testing for the presence of the disease after the onset of symptoms has a negative impact on chances of survival and treatment costs.
Miniaturized low cost diagnostic devices that can be used outside the hospital setting can provide continuous health monitoring and aid in early diagnosis. This thesis presents techniques to develop such disease screening and health monitoring devices. The techniques presented here focus on medical devices that can benefit from microfluidic devices, fluorescence imaging, and antibody testing
Single-cell microfluidic impedance cytometry: From raw signals to cell phenotypes using data analytics
The biophysical analysis of single-cells by microfluidic impedance cytometry is emerging as a label-free and high-throughput means to stratify the heterogeneity of cellular systems based on their electrophysiology. Emerging applications range from fundamental life-science and drug assessment research to point-of-care diagnostics and precision medicine. Recently, novel chip designs and data analytic strategies are laying the foundation for multiparametric cell characterization and subpopulation distinction, which are essential to understand biological function, follow disease progression and monitor cell behaviour in microsystems. In this tutorial review, we present a comparative survey of the approaches to elucidate cellular and subcellular features from impedance cytometry data, covering the related subjects of device design, data analytics (i.e., signal processing, dielectric modelling, population clustering), and phenotyping applications. We give special emphasis to the exciting recent developments of the technique (timeframe 2017-2020) and provide our perspective on future challenges and directions. Its synergistic application with microfluidic separation, sensor science and machine learning can form an essential tool-kit for label-free quantification and isolation of subpopulations to stratify heterogeneous biosystems
Exploiting open source 3D printer architecture for laboratory robotics to automate high-throughput time-lapse imaging for analytical microbiology
Growth in open-source hardware designs combined with the low-cost of high performance optoelectronic and robotics components has supported a resurgence of in-house custom lab equipment development. We describe a low cost (below USD700), open-source, fully customizable high-throughput imaging system for analytical microbiology applications. The system comprises a Raspberry Pi camera mounted on an aluminium extrusion frame with 3D-printed joints controlled by an Arduino microcontroller running open-source Repetier Host Firmware. The camera position is controlled by simple G-code scripts supplied from a Raspberry Pi singleboard computer and allow customized time-lapse imaging of microdevices over a large imaging area. Open-source OctoPrint software allows remote access and control. This simple yet effective design allows high-throughput microbiology testing in multiple formats including formats for bacterial motility, colony growth, microtitre plates and microfluidic devices termed âlab-on-a-combâ to screen the effects of different culture media components and antibiotics on bacterial growth. The open-source robot design allows customization of the size of the imaging area; the current design has an imaging area of ~420 Ă 300mm, which allows 29 âlab-on-a-combâ devices to be imaged which is equivalent 3480 individual 1ÎŒl samples. The system can also be modified for fluorescence detection using LED and emission filters embedded on the PiCam for more sensitive detection of bacterial growth using fluorescent dyes
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The integration of active silicon components in polymer microfluidic devices
Early microfluidic devices borrowed technology from established CMOS microfabrication, and were therefore structurally similar to silicon computer chips. In the late 1990s, George Whitesides' group pioneered a cheaper, mass producible polymer device fabrication technique called 'soft lithography' that revolutionized modern microfluidics. This dissertative work has been focused on re-introducing silicon as a common material in microfluidic devices, but as an active component instead of a structural one. These active components exploit the optical properties, electronic properties, and optoelectronic properties of silicon. The optical properties of silicon are utilized in the integration of silicon nanophotonic ring resonators as refractive index sensors embedded in microfluidic channels. The electronic properties of silicon are utilized in the fabrication of an ultra-thin Schottky diode for use as a transmission radiation particle detector for focused ion-beams. Finally, the optoelectronic properties of silicon are used as a photoconductive layer in light-induced dielectrophoretic manipulation of cells. These three projects are combined to investigate optofluidic sensing and manipulation, with potential radiobiological applications
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