187 research outputs found
Design and fabrication of a centrifugally driven microfluidic disk for fully integrated metabolic assays on whole blood
For the first time, we present a novel and fully integrated centrifugal microfluidic “ lab-on-a-disk” for rapid metabolic assays in human whole blood. All essential steps comprising blood sampling, metering, plasma extraction and the final optical detection are conducted within t = 150 s in passive structures integrated on one disposable disk. Our technology features a novel plasma extraction structure (V = 500 nL, CV < 5%) without using any hydrophobic microfluidics where the purified plasma (cRBC< 0.11%) is centrifugally separated and subsequently extracted through a capillarily primed extraction channel into the detection chamber. While this capillary extraction requires precisely defined, narrow micro-structures, the reactive mixing and detection is most efficient within larger cavities. The corresponding manufacturing technique of these macro- and micro structures in the range of 30 µ m to 1000 µ m is also presented for the first time: A novel, cost-efficient hybrid prototyping technique of a multiscale epoxy master for subsequent hot embossing of polymer disks
TIR-based dynamic liquid-level and flow-rate sensing and its application on centrifugal microfluidic platforms
For the first time we present a technique for the spatio-temporally resolved localization of liquid-gas interfaces on centrifugal microfluidic platforms based on total internal reflection (TIR) at the channel wall. The simple setup consists of a line laser and a linear image sensor array mounted in a stationary instrument. Apart from identifying the presence of (usually unwanted) gas bubbles, the here described online meniscus detection allows to measure liquid volumes with a high precision of 1.9%. Additionally, flow rates and viscosities (range: 1-10.7 mPa s) can be sensed even during rotation at frequencies up to 30 Hz with a precision of 4.7% and 4.3%, respectively
Interaction quantum quenches in the one-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model with spin imbalance
Using the time-dependent density matrix renormalization group method and
exact diagonalization, we study the non-equilibrium dynamics of the
one-dimensional Fermi-Hubbard model following a quantum quench or a ramp of the
onsite interaction strength. For quenches from the non-interacting to the
attractive regime, we investigate the dynamical emergence of
Fulde-Ferrell-Larkin-Ovchinnikov (FFLO) correlations, which at finite spin
polarizations are the dominant two-body correlations in the ground state, and
their signatures in the pair quasi-momentum distribution function. We observe
that the post-quench double occupancy exhibits a maximum as the interaction
strength becomes of the order of the bandwidth. Finally, we study quenches and
ramps from attractive to repulsive interactions, which imprint FFLO
correlations onto repulsively bound pairs. We show that a quite short ramp time
is sufficient to wipe out the characteristic FFLO features in the post-quench
pair momentum distribution functions.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, minor revisions, version as publishe
Optical beam guidance in monolithic polymer chips for miniaturized colorimetric assays
For the first time, we present a simple and robust optical concept to enable precise and sensitive read-out of colorimetric assays in flat lab-on-a-chip devices. The optical guidance of the probe beam through an incorporated measurement chamber to the detector is based on the total internal reflection at V-grooves in the polymer chip. This way, the optical path length through the flat measurement chamber and thus the performance of the measurements are massively enhanced compared to direct (perpendicular) beam incidence. This is demonstrated by a chip-based, colorimetric glucose-assay on serum. Outstanding features are an excellent reproducibility (CV= 1.91 %), a competitive lower limit of detection (cmin = 124 μM), and a high degree of linearity (R2 = 0.998) within a working range extending over nearly three orders of magnitude
Direct hemoglobin measurement by monolithically integrated optical beam guidance
We present a concept for optical beam guidance by total internal reflection (TIR) at V-grooves as retro reflectors which are monolithically integrated on a microfluidic "lab-on-a-disk". This way, the optical path length through a measurement chamber and thus the sensitivity of colorimetric assays is massively enhanced compared to direct (perpendicular) beam incidence. With this rugged optical concept, we determine the concentration of hemoglobin (Hb) in human whole blood. Outstanding features are a high degree of linearity (R2 = 0.993) between the optical signal and the Hb together with a reproducibility of CV= 2.9 %, and a time-to-result of 100 seconds, only
Parallelization of chip-based fluorescence immuno-assays with quantum-dot labelled beads
This paper presents an optical concept for the read-out of a parallel, bead-based fluorescence immunoassay conducted on a lab-on-a-disk platform. The reusable part of the modular setup comprises a detection unit featuring a single LED as light source, two emission-filters, and a color CCD-camera as standard components together with a spinning drive as actuation unit. The miniaturized lab-on-a-disk is devised as a disposable. In the read-out process of the parallel assay, beads are first identified by the color of incorporated quantum dots (QDs). Next, the reaction-specific fluorescence signal is quantified with FluoSpheres-labeled detection anti-bodies. To enable a fast and automated read-out, suitable algorithms have been implemented in this work. Based on this concept, we successfully demonstrated a Hepatitis-A assay on our disk-based lab-on-a-chip
Observation of an orbital interaction-induced Feshbach resonance in 173-Yb
We report on the experimental observation of a novel inter-orbital Feshbach
resonance in ultracold 173-Yb atoms, which opens the possibility of tuning the
interactions between the 1S0 and 3P0 metastable state, both possessing
vanishing total electronic angular momentum. The resonance is observed at
experimentally accessible magnetic field strengths and occurs universally for
all hyperfine state combinations. We characterize the resonance in the bulk via
inter-orbital cross-thermalization as well as in a three-dimensional lattice
using high-resolution clock-line spectroscopy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Intrarater and Interrater Reliability of the Beighton and Horan Joint Mobility Index
Objective: Clinicians may benefit from using a joint mobility index to screen for individuals on the high end of the spectrum of joint laxity (ie, those with generalized joint laxity), which may be associated with musculoskeletal complaints. Reliability of the Beighton and Horan Joint Mobility Index (BHJMI) has not been reported in the literature. Our purpose was to determine intrarater and interrater reliability of (1) composite BHJMI scores (the overall score from 0 to 9), and (2) categorized scores, the BHJMI scores in 3 categories (0 to 2, 3 to 4, and 5 to 9) Design and Setting: This was an intrarater and interrater
reliability study. Data were collected in an academic physical
therapy department and in a high school.
Subjects: Forty-two (intrarater) and 36 (interrater) female
volunteers, aged 15 to 45 years.
Measurements: Subjects were screened using the BHJMI.
Percentage agreement and the Spearman rho were used to
analyze BHJMI composite and category scores.
Results: The percentage agreement and the Spearman rho
for intrarater and interrater reliability of BHJMI composite scores
were 69% and .86 and 51% and .87, respectively. The percentage
agreement and the Spearman rho for intrarater and
interrater reliability of the category scores were 81% and .81
and 89% and .75, respectively.
Conclusions: Reliability of the BHJMI was good to excellent
in screening for generalized joint laxity in females aged 15 to
45 years
Atrial Natriuretic Peptide Levels Reflect Hemodynamic Changes Under Pacemaker Stimulation
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73244/1/j.1540-8159.1990.tb02142.x.pd
Integrated acoustic immunoaffinity-capture (IAI) platform for detection of PSA from whole blood samples.
On-chip detection of low abundant protein biomarkers is of interest to enable point-of-care diagnostics. Using a simple form of integration, we have realized an integrated microfluidic platform for the detection of prostate specific antigen (PSA), directly in anti-coagulated whole blood. We combine acoustophoresis-based separation of plasma from undiluted whole blood with a miniaturized immunoassay system in a polymer manifold, demonstrating improved assay speed on our Integrated Acoustic Immunoaffinity-capture (IAI) platform. The IAI platform separates plasma from undiluted whole blood by means of acoustophoresis and provides cell free plasma of clinical quality at a rate of 10 uL/min for an online immunoaffinity-capture of PSA on a porous silicon antibody microarray. The whole blood input (hematocrit 38-40%) rate was 50 μl min(-1) giving a plasma volume fraction yield of ≈33%. PSA was immunoaffinity-captured directly from spiked female whole blood samples at clinically significant levels of 1.7-100 ng ml(-1) within 15 min and was subsequently detected via fluorescence readout, showing a linear response over the entire range with a coefficient of variation of 13%
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