Literature DB >> 18538599

Spectrally resolved flow imaging of fluids inside a microfluidic chip with ultrahigh time resolution.

Elad Harel1, Alex Pines.   

Abstract

Microfluidics has advanced to become a complete lab-on-a-chip platform with applications across many disciplines of scientific research. While optical techniques are primarily used as modes of detection, magnetic resonance (MR) is emerging as a potentially powerful and complementary tool because of its non-invasive operation and analytical fidelity. Two prevailing limitations currently inhibit MR techniques on microfluidic devices: poor sensitivity and the relatively slow time scale of dynamics that can be probed. It is commonly assumed that the time scale of observation of one variable limits the certainty with which one can measure the complementary variable. For example, short observation times imply poor spectral resolution. In this article, we demonstrate a new methodology that overcomes this fundamental limit, allowing in principle for arbitrarily high temporal resolution with a sensitivity across the entire microfluidic device several orders of magnitude greater than is possible by direct MR measurement. The enhancement is evidenced by recording chemically resolved fluid mixing through a complex 3D microfluidic device at 500 frames per second, the highest recorded in a magnetic resonance imaging experiment. The key to this development is combining remote detection with a time 'slicing' of its spatially encoded counterpart. Remote detection circumvents the problem of insensitive direct MR detection on a microfluidic device where the direct sensitivity is less than 10(-5) relative to traditional NMR, while the time slicing eliminates the constraints of the limited observation time by converting the time variable into a spatial variable through the use of magnetic field gradients. This method has implications for observing fast processes, such as fluid mixing, rapid binding, and certain classes of chemical reactions with sub millisecond time resolution and as a new modality for on-chip chromatography.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18538599     DOI: 10.1016/j.jmr.2008.04.037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Magn Reson        ISSN: 1090-7807            Impact factor:   2.229


  2 in total

1.  Hyperpolarized xenon NMR and MRI signal amplification by gas extraction.

Authors:  Xin Zhou; Dominic Graziani; Alexander Pines
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-09-22       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Time- and site-resolved kinetic NMR for real-time monitoring of off-equilibrium reactions by 2D spectrotemporal correlations.

Authors:  Michael J Jaroszewicz; Mengxiao Liu; Jihyun Kim; Guannan Zhang; Yaewon Kim; Christian Hilty; Lucio Frydman
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-02-11       Impact factor: 14.919

  2 in total

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