Isomotive dielectrophoresis for parallel analysis of individual particles

Two dielectrophoresis systems are introduced where the induced dielectrophoretic force is constant throughout the experimental region, resulting in uniform (isomotive) microparticle translation. Isomotive dielectrophoresis (isoDEP) is accomplished through a unique geometry where the gradient of the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Electrophoresis 2017-06, Vol.38 (11), p.1441-1449
Hauptverfasser: Allen, Daniel J., Accolla, Robert P., Williams, Stuart J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Two dielectrophoresis systems are introduced where the induced dielectrophoretic force is constant throughout the experimental region, resulting in uniform (isomotive) microparticle translation. Isomotive dielectrophoresis (isoDEP) is accomplished through a unique geometry where the gradient of the field‐squared (∇Erms2) is constant, a characteristic that is otherwise highly nonuniform in traditional DEP platforms. The governing isoDEP equations were derived herein and applied to two different isoDEP prototypes: (i) one fabricated from deep reactive ion etching (DRIE) of a conductive silicon wafer (1–10 Ω‐cm) whose patterned features served as electrodes and microchannel sidewalls simultaneously; (ii) a second where the electric field is applied lengthwise through a PDMS microchannel whose geometry follows a specific curvature. Both positive and negative dielectrophoresis was demonstrated with the isoDEP devices using silver‐coated hollow glass spheres and polystyrene particles, respectively. Particle tracking was used to compare particle trajectory with the expected dielectrophoretic response; further, particle velocity was used to measure the Clausius–Mossotti factor of individual polystyrene particles (18–24.9 μm) in both devices with a value of –0.40 ± 0.063 (n = 110) and –0.48 ± 0.055 (n = 18) for the DRIE and PDMS isoDEP platforms, respectively. The isoDEP platform is capable of analyzing multiple particles simultaneously, providing greater throughput than traditional electrorotation platforms.
ISSN:0173-0835
1522-2683
DOI:10.1002/elps.201600517