Density-Gradient-Free Microfluidic Centrifugation
for Analytical and Preparative Separation of Nanoparticles
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Abstract
Sedimentation
and centrifugation techniques are widely applied
for the separation of biomolecules and colloids but require the presence
of controlled density gradients for stable operation. Here we present
an approach for separating nanoparticles in free solution without
gradients. We use microfluidics to generate a convective flow perpendicular
to the sedimentation direction. We show that the hydrodynamic Rayleigh–Taylor-like
instability, which, in traditional methods, requires the presence
of a density gradient, can be suppressed by the Poiseuille flow in
the microchannel. We illustrate the power of this approach by demonstrating
the separation of mixtures of particles on the nanometer scale, orders
of magnitude smaller than the micrometer-sized objects separated by
conventional inertial microfluidic approaches. This technique exhibits
a series of favorable features including short analysis time, small
sample volume, limited dilution of the analyte, limited interactions
with surfaces as well as the possibility to tune easily the separation
range by adjusting the geometry of the system. These features highlight
the potential of gradient-free microfluidic centrifugation as an attractive
route toward a broad range of nanoscale applications