29 research outputs found

    Rapid and mask-less laser-processing technique for the fabrication of microstructures in polydimethylsiloxane

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    We report a rapid laser-based method for structuring polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) on the micron-scale. This mask-less method uses a digital multi-mirror device as a spatial light modulator to produce a given spatial intensity pattern to create arbitrarily shaped structures via either ablation or multi-photon photo-polymerisation in a master substrate, which is subsequently used to cast the complementary patterns in PDMS. This patterned PDMS mould was then used for micro-contact printing of ink and biological molecules

    Dual dean entrainment with volume ratio modulation for efficient droplet co-encapsulation: Extreme single-cell indexing

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    The future of single cell diversity screens involves ever-larger sample sizes, dictating the need for higher throughput methods with low analytical noise to accurately describe the nature of the cellular system. Current approaches are limited by the Poisson statistic, requiring dilute cell suspensions and associated losses in throughput. In this contribution, we apply Dean entrainment to both cell and bead inputs, defining different volume packets to effect efficient co-encapsulation. Volume ratio scaling was explored to identify optimal conditions. This enabled the co-encapsulation of single cells with reporter beads at rates of ∼1 million cells per hour, while increasing assay signal-to-noise with cell multiplet rates of ∼2.5% and capturing ∼70% of cells. The method, called Pirouette coupling, extends our capacity to investigate biological systems.Jack Harrington, Luis Blay Esteban, Jonathan Butement, Andres F. Vallejo, Simon I. R. Lane, Bhavwanti Sheth, Maaike S. A. Jongen, Rachel Parker, Patrick S. Stumpf, Rosanna C. G. Smith, Ben D. MacArthur, Matthew J. J. Rose-Zerilli, Marta E. Polak, Tim Underwood and Jonathan Wes

    Discovery of palladium, antimony, tellurium, iodine, and xenon isotopes

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    Currently, thirty-eight palladium, thirty-eight antimony, thirty-nine tellurium, thirty-eight iodine, and forty xenon isotopes have been observed and the discovery of these isotopes is discussed here. For each isotope a brief synopsis of the first refereed publication, including the production and identification method, is presented.Comment: to be published in At. Data Nucl. Data Table

    A light-guiding urinary catheter for the inhibition of Proteus mirabilis biofilm formation

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    Catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) is a leading cause of hospital-acquired infections worldwide causing debilitating illness for patients as well as a significant financial and treatment burden on health services. CAUTI is linked with the build-up of biofilms on catheter surfaces which act as a reservoir for infection. Additionally, urease-producing bacteria such as Gram-negative Proteus mirabilis (PM), can form crystalline biofilms which encrust catheter surfaces ultimately leading to blockages which require immediate removal of the catheter. Currently there are limited treatments available to prevent the formation of biofilms by PM as well as other urinary tract infection causing bacteria. A novel concept for a light-guiding urinary catheter is presented where a silicone elastomer waveguide incorporated along the length of the catheter is used to irradiate the catheter surfaces with antimicrobial blue light (405 nm) to prevent biofilm formation in situ. The prototype device is mass producible while also easy to fabricate in a lab setting for research studies. The inhibitory effect of blue light on PM biofilm formation over a range of irradiances is described for the first time showing an LD90 at 192–345 J/cm2 and total inhibition at 1,700 J/cm2 In vitro studies show that the light-guiding catheter (LGC) prototypes exhibit a 98% inhibition in PM biofilm formation inside the catheter lumen at an average estimated irradiance of 30–50 mW/cm2 (324–540 J/cm2 fluence) showing that the concept is highly effective, promising to be a powerful and economical antimicrobial approach to prevent catheter associated biofilm development and blockage

    Monolithically-integrated cytometer for measuring particle diameter in the extracellular vesicle size range using multi-angle scattering

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    Size measurement of extracellular vesicles is hampered by the high cost and measurement uncertainty of conventional flow cytometers which is mainly due to the use of non-specialised free space optics. Integrated cytometry, where the optics and fluidics are embedded in a monolithic chip shows promise for the production of low cost, micro-flow cytometers dedicated for extracellular vesicle (EV) analysis with improved size measurement accuracy and precision. This research demonstrates a unique integrated cytometer for sub-micron particle size measurement using multi-angle scattering analysis. A combination of three technologies is used: (i) Dean-based hydrodynamic focussing to deliver a tight sample core stream to the analysis region, (ii) integrated waveguides with multimode interference devices to focus a narrow excitation beam onto the sample stream, and (iii) an angular array of collection waveguides to measure particle scattering distribution and calculate diameter. Low index 200 nm liposomes could be detected and polystyrene size standards as small as 400 nm diameter could be measured with an uncertainty of ±21 nm (1/2 IQR) demonstrating a first step on the path to high performance integrated cytometry of EVs

    Data_Sheet_1_A light-guiding urinary catheter for the inhibition of Proteus mirabilis biofilm formation.PDF

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    Catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) is a leading cause of hospital-acquired infections worldwide causing debilitating illness for patients as well as a significant financial and treatment burden on health services. CAUTI is linked with the build-up of biofilms on catheter surfaces which act as a reservoir for infection. Additionally, urease-producing bacteria such as Gram-negative Proteus mirabilis (PM), can form crystalline biofilms which encrust catheter surfaces ultimately leading to blockages which require immediate removal of the catheter. Currently there are limited treatments available to prevent the formation of biofilms by PM as well as other urinary tract infection causing bacteria. A novel concept for a light-guiding urinary catheter is presented where a silicone elastomer waveguide incorporated along the length of the catheter is used to irradiate the catheter surfaces with antimicrobial blue light (405 nm) to prevent biofilm formation in situ. The prototype device is mass producible while also easy to fabricate in a lab setting for research studies. The inhibitory effect of blue light on PM biofilm formation over a range of irradiances is described for the first time showing an LD90 at 192–345 J/cm2 and total inhibition at 1,700 J/cm2In vitro studies show that the light-guiding catheter (LGC) prototypes exhibit a 98% inhibition in PM biofilm formation inside the catheter lumen at an average estimated irradiance of 30–50 mW/cm2 (324–540 J/cm2 fluence) showing that the concept is highly effective, promising to be a powerful and economical antimicrobial approach to prevent catheter associated biofilm development and blockage.</p
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