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High throughput extraction of plasma using a secondary flow-aided inertial microfluidic device
Author(s) -
Jun Zhang,
Sheng Yan,
Weihua Li,
Gürsel Alıcı,
NamTrung Nguyen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
rsc advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.746
H-Index - 148
ISSN - 2046-2069
DOI - 10.1039/c4ra06513a
Subject(s) - microfluidics , throughput , volumetric flow rate , channel (broadcasting) , microfluidic chip , chip , extraction (chemistry) , inertial frame of reference , plasma , materials science , sample (material) , flow (mathematics) , blood flow , process (computing) , lab on a chip , chromatography , nanotechnology , analytical chemistry (journal) , computer science , chemistry , mechanics , physics , telecommunications , wireless , quantum mechanics , medicine , operating system
In this paper, we report the development of a simple inertial microfluidic device with a serpentine channel for efficiently separating blood cells from plasma. The working mechanism of this device relies on the two-sided secondary flow aided inertial focusing of particles in a serpentine channel. Specifically, blood cells were focused along two sides of the channel, while the blood plasma was collected at the cell-free region within the channel centre. The device was tested with diluted (1/20) whole blood. A relatively high flow rate of 350 嬠min-1 with a purity of [similar]99.75% was achieved in a single process. A further improvement to 99.95% purity was obtained after a second process. Parallelization with eight parallel serpentine channels achieved a high flow rate of 2.8 ml min-1 and a massive throughput of 7 נ108 cells per min. Our device could be easily integrated with other sample preparation processes or detection units to form a sample-to-answer lab-on-a-chip system.Full Tex

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