| Literature DB >> 21547316 |
Ryan R Anderson1, Weisheng Hu, Jong Wook Noh, William C Dahlquist, Stanley J Ness, Timothy M Gustafson, Danny C Richards, Seunghyun Kim, Brian A Mazzeo, Adam T Woolley, Gregory P Nordin.
Abstract
We report the integration of a nanomechanical sensor consisting of 16 silicon microcantilevers with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microfluidics. For microcantilevers positioned near the bottom of a microfluidic flow channel, a transient differential analyte concentration for the top versus bottom surface of each microcantilever is created when an analyte-bearing fluid is introduced into the flow channel (which is initially filled with a non-analyte containing solution). We use this effect to characterize a bare (nonfunctionalized) microcantilever array in which the microcantilevers are simultaneously read out with our recently developed high sensitivity in-plane photonic transduction method. We first examine the case of non-specific binding of bovine serum albumin (BSA) to silicon. The average maximum transient microcantilever deflection in the array is -1.6 nm, which corresponds to a differential surface stress of only -0.23 mN m(-1). This is in excellent agreement with the maximum differential surface stress calculated based on a modified rate equation in conjunction with finite element simulation. Following BSA adsorption, buffer solutions with different pH are introduced to further study microcantilever array transient response. Deflections of 20-100 nm are observed (2-14 mN m(-1) differential surface stress). At a flow rate of 5 μL min(-1), the average measured temporal width (FWHM) of the transient response is 5.3 s for BSA non-specific binding and 0.74 s for pH changes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21547316 DOI: 10.1039/c1lc20025a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lab Chip ISSN: 1473-0189 Impact factor: 6.799