1 research outputs found
Highly Enriched, Controllable, Continuous Aerosol Sampling Using Inertial Microfluidics and Its Application to Real-Time Detection of Airborne Bacteria
We
report a novel microfluidic technique for sampling of aerosols
into liquids. The two-phase fluid, sampling air and collecting liquid,
forms a stratified flow in the curved microchannel. By passing fluids
through the curved region, the particles are transferred from air
into the liquid phase by the particle centrifugal and drag forces.
This microfluidic-based aerosol-into-liquid sampling system, called
the MicroSampler, is driven by particle inertial differences. To evaluate
the physical particle collection efficiency of the MicroSampler, we
used standard polystyrene-latex (PSL) particles ranging in size from
0.6 to 2.1 μm and measured particle concentrations upstream
and downstream of the MicroSampler with an aerodynamic particle sizer.
The cutoff diameter of particle collection was selected controlling
the air flow velocity (microfluidic air flow of 0.6 L/min showed a
particle collection efficiency of ∼98% at a particle diameter
of 1 μm), and continuous enriched particle sampling was possible
for real-time postprocessing application. With regard to biological
collection efficiency, the MicroSampler showed superior microbial
recovery (Staphylococcus epidermidis) compared to the conventional BioSampler technique. These results
indicate that our MicroSampler can be used as a portable, cost-effective,
simple, and continuous airborne microorganism collector for applications
in real-time bioaerosol detection