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Oscillatory inertial focusing in infinite microchannels
by
Edd, Jon F.
, Toner, Mehmet
, Mutlu, Baris R.
in
Applied Physical Sciences
/ Bacteria
/ Biomedical materials
/ Blood cells
/ Blood circulation
/ Brownian motion
/ Dimensionless numbers
/ Exosomes
/ Fluid dynamics
/ Fluid flow
/ Fractionation
/ Fungi
/ Microchannels
/ Microfluidics
/ Migration
/ Oscillators
/ Physical Sciences
/ Platelets
/ Reynolds number
/ Stem cells
/ Tumor cells
2018
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Oscillatory inertial focusing in infinite microchannels
by
Edd, Jon F.
, Toner, Mehmet
, Mutlu, Baris R.
in
Applied Physical Sciences
/ Bacteria
/ Biomedical materials
/ Blood cells
/ Blood circulation
/ Brownian motion
/ Dimensionless numbers
/ Exosomes
/ Fluid dynamics
/ Fluid flow
/ Fractionation
/ Fungi
/ Microchannels
/ Microfluidics
/ Migration
/ Oscillators
/ Physical Sciences
/ Platelets
/ Reynolds number
/ Stem cells
/ Tumor cells
2018
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Oscillatory inertial focusing in infinite microchannels
by
Edd, Jon F.
, Toner, Mehmet
, Mutlu, Baris R.
in
Applied Physical Sciences
/ Bacteria
/ Biomedical materials
/ Blood cells
/ Blood circulation
/ Brownian motion
/ Dimensionless numbers
/ Exosomes
/ Fluid dynamics
/ Fluid flow
/ Fractionation
/ Fungi
/ Microchannels
/ Microfluidics
/ Migration
/ Oscillators
/ Physical Sciences
/ Platelets
/ Reynolds number
/ Stem cells
/ Tumor cells
2018
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Journal Article
Oscillatory inertial focusing in infinite microchannels
2018
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Overview
Inertial microfluidics (i.e., migration and focusing of particles in finite Reynolds number microchannel flows) is a passive, precise, and high-throughput method for microparticle manipulation and sorting. Therefore, it has been utilized in numerous biomedical applications including phenotypic cell screening, blood fractionation, and rare-cell isolation. Nonetheless, the applications of this technology have been limited to larger bioparticles such as blood cells, circulating tumor cells, and stem cells, because smaller particles require drastically longer channels for inertial focusing, which increases the pressure requirement and the footprint of the device to the extent that the system becomes unfeasible. Inertial manipulation of smaller bioparticles such as fungi, bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens or blood components such as platelets and exosomes is of significant interest. Here, we show that using oscillatory microfluidics, inertial focusing in practically “infinite channels” can be achieved, allowing for focusing of micron-scale (i.e. hundreds of nanometers) particles. This method enables manipulation of particles at extremely low particle Reynolds number (Rep
< 0.005) flows that are otherwise unattainable by steady-flow inertial microfluidics (which has been limited to Rep
> ∼10−1). Using this technique, we demonstrated that synthetic particles as small as 500 nm and a submicron bacterium, Staphylococcus aureus, can be inertially focused. Furthermore, we characterized the physics of inertial microfluidics in this newly enabled particle size and Rep
range using a Peclet-like dimensionless number (α). We experimentally observed that α >> 1 is required to overcome diffusion and be able to inertially manipulate particles.
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