University of Wollongong
Browse

Isolating plasma from blood using a dielectrophoresis-active hydrophoretic device

Download (20.07 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 05:37 authored by Sheng Yan, Jun Zhang, Gursel AliciGursel Alici, Haiping DuHaiping Du, Yonggang Zhu, Weihua LiWeihua Li
Plasma is a complex substance that contains proteins and circulating nucleic acids and viruses that can be utilised for clinical diagnostics, albeit a precise analysis depends on the plasma being totally free of cells. We proposed the use of a dielectrophoresis (DEP)-active hydrophoretic method to isolate plasma from blood in a high-throughput manner. This microfluidic device consists of anisotropic microstructures embedded on the top of the channel which generate lateral pressure gradients while interdigitised electrodes lay on the bottom of the channel which can push particles or cells into a higher level using a negative DEP force. Large and small particles or cells (3 μm and 10 μm particles, and red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets) can be focused at the same time in our DEP-active hydrophoretic device at an appropriate flow rate and applied voltage. Based on this principle, all the blood cells were filtrated from whole blood and then the plasma was extracted with a purity of 94.2% and a yield of 16.5% at a flow rate of 10 μL min−1. This solved the challenging problem caused by the relatively low throughput of the DEP based device. Our DEP-active hydrophoretic device is a flexible and tunable system that can control the lateral positions of particles by modulating the external voltages without redesigning and fabricating a new channel, and because it is easy to operate, it is easily compatible with other microfluidic platforms that are used for further detection.

History

Citation

Yan, S., Zhang, J., Alici, G., Du, H., Zhu, Y. & Li, W. (2014). Isolating plasma from blood using a dielectrophoresis-active hydrophoretic device. Lab on a Chip: miniaturisation for chemistry, physics, biology, materials science and bioengineering, 14 (16), 2993-3003.

Journal title

Lab on a Chip

Volume

14

Issue

16

Pagination

2993-3003

Language

English

RIS ID

92042

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC