High-speed microparticle isolation unlimited by Poisson statistics

High-speed isolation of microparticles ( e.g. , microplastics, heavy metal particles, microbes, cells) from heterogeneous populations is the key element of high-throughput sorting instruments for chemical, biological, industrial and medical applications. Unfortunately, the performance of continuous...

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Veröffentlicht in:Lab on a chip 2019-08, Vol.19 (16), p.2669-2677
Hauptverfasser: Iino, Takanori, Okano, Kazunori, Lee, Sang Wook, Yamakawa, Takeshi, Hagihara, Hiroki, Hong, Zhen-Yi, Maeno, Takanori, Kasai, Yusuke, Sakuma, Shinya, Hayakawa, Takeshi, Arai, Fumihito, Ozeki, Yasuyuki, Goda, Keisuke, Hosokawa, Yoichiroh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:High-speed isolation of microparticles ( e.g. , microplastics, heavy metal particles, microbes, cells) from heterogeneous populations is the key element of high-throughput sorting instruments for chemical, biological, industrial and medical applications. Unfortunately, the performance of continuous microparticle isolation or so-called sorting is fundamentally limited by the trade-off between throughput, purity, and yield. For example, at a given throughput, high-purity sorting needs to sacrifice yield, or vice versa . This is due to Poisson statistics of events ( i.e. , microparticles, microparticle clusters, microparticle debris) in which the interval between successive events is stochastic and can be very short. Here we demonstrate an on-chip microparticle sorter with an ultrashort switching window in both time (10 μs) and space (10 μm) at a high flow speed of 1 m s −1 , thereby overcoming the Poisson trade-off. This is made possible by using femtosecond laser pulses that can produce highly localized transient cavitation bubbles in a microchannel to kick target microparticles from an acoustically focused, densely aligned, bumper-to-bumper stream of microparticles. Our method is important for rare-microparticle sorting applications where both high purity and high yield are required to avoid missing rare microparticles. We demonstrate an on-chip microparticle sorter with an ultrashort switching window using femtosecond laser pulses to overcome the fundamental limitation of the sorting performance described by Poisson statistics.
ISSN:1473-0197
1473-0189
DOI:10.1039/c9lc00324j