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      Spiral microchannel with ordered micro-obstacles for continuous and highly-efficient particle separation

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          Abstract

          We present a microfluidic system containing a spiral channel interspersed with micro-obstacles, which allows secondary flow acceleration for enhancing particle separation.

          Abstract

          Controllable manipulation of fluid flow is crucial for efficient particle separation, which is associated with plenty of biomedical and industrial applications. Microfluidic technologies have achieved promising progress in particle positioning depending on inertial force with or without the help of the Dean effect. Herein, we describe an inertial microfluidic system containing a spiral microchannel for various highly efficient particle separations. We demonstrated that Dean-like secondary flow can be regulated by geometric confinement in the microchannel. On the introduction of a library of micro-obstacles into the spiral microchannels, the resulting linear acceleration of secondary flow can be applied to remarkably enhance particle focusing in time and space. Further, multiple separating and sorting manipulations of particles including polymeric particles, circulating tumor cells, and blood cells, can be successfully accomplished in the dimension-confined spiral channels in a sheathless, high-throughput (typically 3 ml min −1), long-term (at least 4 h), and highly-efficient (up to 99.8% focusing) manner. The methodological achievement pointing to ease-of-use, effective, and high-throughput particle manipulations is useful for both laboratory and commercial developments of microfluidic systems in life and material sciences.

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          Most cited references44

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          Microfluidics: Fluid physics at the nanoliter scale

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            Continuous inertial focusing, ordering, and separation of particles in microchannels.

            Under laminar flow conditions, when no external forces are applied, particles are generally thought to follow fluid streamlines. Contrary to this perspective, we observe that flowing particles migrate across streamlines in a continuous, predictable, and accurate manner in microchannels experiencing laminar flows. The migration is attributed to lift forces on particles that are observed when inertial aspects of the flow become significant. We identified symmetric and asymmetric channel geometries that provide additional inertial forces that bias particular equilibrium positions to create continuous streams of ordered particles precisely positioned in three spatial dimensions. We were able to order particles laterally, within the transverse plane of the channel, with >80-nm accuracy, and longitudinally, in regular chains along the direction of flow. A fourth dimension of rotational alignment was observed for discoidal red blood cells. Unexpectedly, ordering appears to be independent of particle buoyant direction, suggesting only minor centrifugal contributions. Theoretical analysis indicates the physical principles are operational over a range of channel and particle length scales. The ability to differentially order particles of different sizes, continuously, at high rates, and without external forces in microchannels is expected to have a broad range of applications in continuous bioparticle separation, high-throughput cytometry, and large-scale filtration systems.
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              Inertial microfluidics.

              Despite the common wisdom that inertia does not contribute to microfluidic phenomena, recent work has shown a variety of useful effects that depend on fluid inertia for applications in enhanced mixing, particle separation, and bioparticle focusing. Due to the robust, fault-tolerant physical effects employed and high rates of operation, inertial microfluidic systems are poised to have a critical impact on high-throughput separation applications in environmental cleanup and physiological fluids processing, as well as bioparticle focusing applications in clinical diagnostics. In this review I will discuss the recent accelerated progress in developing prototype inertial microfluidic systems for a variety of applications and attempt to clarify the fundamental fluid dynamic effects that are being exploited. Finally, since this a nascent area of research, I will suggest some future promising directions exploiting fluid inertia on the microscale.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                LCAHAM
                Lab Chip
                Lab Chip
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                1473-0197
                1473-0189
                2017
                2017
                : 17
                : 21
                : 3578-3591
                Affiliations
                [1 ]College of Chemistry and Pharmacy
                [2 ]Northwest A&F University
                [3 ]Yangling
                [4 ]China
                [5 ]College of Life Sciences
                [6 ]College of Veterinary Medicine
                Article
                10.1039/C7LC00691H
                28975177
                f48c62be-98a4-4947-8e35-109996e5f1a2
                © 2017
                History

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