8 research outputs found

    A Monolithic 3D Printed Axisymmetric Co-Flow Single and Compound Emulsion Generator

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    We report a microfluidic droplet generator which can produce single and compound droplets using a 3D axisymmetric co-flow structure. The design considered for the fabrication of the device integrated a user-friendly and cost-effective 3D printing process. To verify the performance of the device, single and compound emulsions of deionized water and mineral oil were generated and their features such as size, generation frequency, and emulsion structures were successfully characterized. In addition, the generation of bio emulsions such as alginate and collagen aqueous droplets in mineral oil was demonstrated in this study. Overall, the monolithic 3D printed axisymmetric droplet generator could offer any user an accessible and easy-to-utilize device for the generation of single and compound emulsions

    A Monolithic 3D Printed Axisymmetric Co-Flow Single and Compound Emulsion Generator

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    We report a microfluidic droplet generator which can produce single and compound droplets using a 3D axisymmetric co-flow structure. The design considered for the fabrication of the device integrated a user-friendly and cost-effective 3D printing process. To verify the performance of the device, single and compound emulsions of deionized water and mineral oil were generated and their features such as size, generation frequency, and emulsion structures were successfully characterized. In addition, the generation of bio emulsions such as alginate and collagen aqueous droplets in mineral oil was demonstrated in this study. Overall, the monolithic 3D printed axisymmetric droplet generator could offer any user an accessible and easy-to-utilize device for the generation of single and compound emulsions

    Spatially selective cell treatment and collection for integrative drug testing using hydrodynamic flow focusing and shifting.

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    Hydrodynamic focusing capable of readily producing and controlling laminar flow facilitates drug treatment of cells in existing microfluidic culture devices. However, to expand applications of such devices to multiparameter drug testing, critical limitations in current hydrodynamic focusing microfluidics must be addressed. Here we describe hydrodynamic focusing and shifting as an advanced microfluidics tool for spatially selective drug delivery and integrative cell-based drug testing. We designed and fabricated a co-flow focusing, three-channel microfluidic device with a wide cell culture chamber. By controlling inlet flow rates of sample and two side solutions, we could generate hydrodynamic focusing and shifting that mediated precise regulation of the path and width of reagent and drug stream in the microfluidic device. We successfully validated a hydrodynamic focusing and shifting approach for spatially selective delivery of DiI, a lipophilic fluorophore, and doxorubicin, a chemotherapeutic agent, to tumor cells in our device. Moreover, subsequent flowing of a trypsin EDTA solution over the cells that were exposed to doxorubicin flow allowed us to selectively collect the treated cells. Our approach enabled downstream high-resolution microscopy of the cell suspension to confirm the nuclear delivery of doxorubicin into the tumor cells. In the device, we could also evaluate in situ the cytotoxic effect of doxorubicin to the tumor cells that were selectively treated by hydrodynamic flow focusing and shifting. These results show that hydrodynamic focusing and shifting enable a fast and robust approach to spatially treat and then collect cells in an optimized microfluidic device, offering an integrative assay tool for efficient drug screening and discovery

    Design, simulation and experimental test of hydrodynamic focusing and shifting microfluidics (HFSM).

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    A Design of HFSM device. B Simulation and C experimental testing of sample fluid in the HFSM device using a brightfield microscope and food dye solution. The red dotted lines in A and B (left) indicate the entrance to the cell culture chamber.</p

    A Monolithic 3D Printed Axisymmetric Co-Flow Single and Compound Emulsion Generator

    No full text
    We report a microfluidic droplet generator which can produce single and compound droplets using a 3D axisymmetric co-flow structure. The design considered for the fabrication of the device integrated a user-friendly and cost-effective 3D printing process. To verify the performance of the device, single and compound emulsions of deionized water and mineral oil were generated and their features such as size, generation frequency, and emulsion structures were successfully characterized. In addition, the generation of bio emulsions such as alginate and collagen aqueous droplets in mineral oil was demonstrated in this study. Overall, the monolithic 3D printed axisymmetric droplet generator could offer any user an accessible and easy-to-utilize device for the generation of single and compound emulsions

    Proliferation and growth of 4T1 tumor cells in the HFSM device.

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    Brightfield microscope images of 4T1 cells in the culture chamber over the course of a 7-day incubation.</p
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