| Literature DB >> 30407426 |
Jordon Gilmore1, Monsur Islam2, Rodrigo Martinez-Duarte3.
Abstract
Since its inception, Compact Disc (CD)-based centrifugal microfluidic technology has drawn a great deal of interest within research communities due to its potential use in biomedical applications. The technology has been referred to by different names, including compact-disc microfluidics, lab-on-a-disk, lab-on-a-CD and bio-disk. This paper critically reviews the state-of-the-art in CD-based centrifugal microfluidics devices and attempts to identify the challenges that, if solved, would enable their use in the extreme point of care. Sample actuation, manufacturing, reagent storage and implementation, target multiplexing, bio-particle detection, required hardware and system disposal, and sustainability are the topics of focus.Entities:
Keywords: centrifugal; diagnostic; lab-on-disk; microfluidics; point of care
Year: 2016 PMID: 30407426 PMCID: PMC6189906 DOI: 10.3390/mi7040052
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1(a) Illustration of rapid fluid mixing by magnetic beads on a rotating disk reported by Grumman et al.; reprinted with the permission from Royal Society of Chemistry [24]; (b) TOP: Time-lapse images of fluid mixing on a rotating disk by reciprocating centrifugal motion. (i) Liquid is added to the loading reservoir; (ii) high rpm during spinning results in compressed air in the pressure chamber; (iii) Decrease in spinning speed results in relaxation of air and pumping of liquid toward the center; (iv) spinning rpms are increased to the maximum level; (v) the siphon is primed as the liquid rises over the siphon crest; (vi) system is emptied; BOTTOM: Flow reciprocation work cycle profile. Reprinted with permission from the American Institute of Physics [30].
Figure 2(A) Schematic of a capillary valve; (B) Schematic of hydrophobic valves using a hydrophobic patch or abrupt change in geometry; (C) Schematic showing a siphon valve where the siphon crest is located closer to the center of the CD than the meniscus front in the siphon microchannel. See text for details on the principles governing their function. Figure reprinted with permission of Royal Society of Chemistry [21].
Figure 3(a) All disc components labeled and fluid is loaded into the source chamber; (b) Rotation speed is increased so that the siphon valve is primed and the first metering chamber is filled; (c) Second metering chamber is filled; (d) All metering chambers are filled and the rotation speed is increased to move excess fluid to the waste chamber; (e) Rotation speed is increased again to open the hydrophobic valves and the wax plugs are melted to release trapped air in the destination chambers, creating a vacuum which allows fluid into destination chambers. Reprinted with the permission of PLOS [43].
Summary of CD drive mechanisms.
| Drive Description | Power | Control | Relative Cost | Special Capability | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Significantly Complex | |||||
| Gyrolab Workstation™ (Gyros AB, Uppsala, Sweden) | 120 VAC | Proprietary Software (Gyroloab Control (embedded), Gyrolab Evaluator (PC-based analysis)) | $$$$ | Laser-induced fluorescence detection, proprietary CDs, automated centrifugation control | [ |
| Custom Colorimetric Hemoglobin Analyzer | 120 VAC | Standard motor drive software, with custom coding for actuation and sample loading | $$$ | Sample loading via Pipejet ™ (BioFluidix, Freiburg, Germany), laser and spectrophotometer, PC controlled actuation | [ |
| Centrifuge with Photomultiplier Tube (PMT) | 120 VAC | Embedded motor control software, PMT read-out software | $$$ | PMT, | [ |
| Moderately Complex | |||||
| CD-Read Only Memory (ROM) Drive | 120 VAC | ASPI driver for PC | $$ | Built-in laser driven optical system, limit of 6000 rpm | [ |
| Stepper Motor + Driver | 12 VDC for drive actuation 120 VAC likely required for driver and user interface (computer) | Programming language with development environment ( | $$ | Speed and torque only limited by rating of selected motor | [ |
| Servo Motor + Driver | Programming language with development environment ( | $$ | Speed and torque only limited by rating of selected motor | [ | |
| Simple | |||||
| Hand-powered Centrifuge for Anemia Diagnosis | Manual | Manual (training may be required for consistency) | $ | Salad-spinner based design, approx. 600 rpm potential speed, tubes used (not CDs) | [ |
| Egg-beater as Centrifuge for Blood Fractionization | Manual | Manual | $ | Approx. 1200 rpm potential speed, tubing used (not CDs) | [ |
$–$$$$: Relative cost scale with “$” representing the least expensive options and “$$$$” representing the most expensive options.
Figure 4(a) Spin profile detailing motor velocity during lysis, measuring and recovering of the sample. Reprinted with permission of the Royal Society of Chemistry [34]; (b) Spin profile of cell lysis using rapid spinning in opposite directions to induce particle collisions. Reprinted with the permission of the Royal Society of Chemistry [55].
Figure 5(a) A typical example of polymer molding of CD, where the CD device is fabricated by hot embossing of a polymer using a PDMS mold which is prepared using a CNC machined PMMA master. Reprinted with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry [60]; (b) Schematic of the different layers of a CNC manufactured CD microfluidics device comprised of three polycarbonate and two PSA layers (left) and photograph of the assembled CD device (right). Reprinted with permission from the American Institute of Physics [30]; (c) Schematic of different layers of transparency films with printer toner and the assembled CD device with a 3D view of a single chamber, fabricated with PCL method. Reprinted with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry [59].
Summary of CD manufacturing processes. Only selected examples are reported.
| Fabrication Technique | Material | Inexpensive | Disposable | Functionalities |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polymer Molding | COC | No | Yes | Extraction of plasma from whole blood [ |
| PDMS | No | No | Purification of CD4+ cells from blood sample [ | |
| CNC Machining | PMMA | Yes | Yes | Purification and separation of miRNA from whole blood [ |
| Polycarbonate | Yes | Yes | Cell lysis and nucleic acid extraction [ | |
| PCL Method | Polyester | Yes | Yes | Protein quantitation in blood [ |
Figure 6(a) Schematic of fluidic system composed of a series of hydrophobic and capillary valves. The siphon valve, along with a reciprocating spin protocol, was used to expose the sample to the reaction chamber for detection; (b) Schematic of antibody capture at each array element in the reaction chamber. Reprinted with permission from the American Institute of Physics [30].
Figure 7Schematic of the polymerase chain reaction, where a DNA sample is combined with DNA polymerase (Taq as in sample A of bottom image) and exposed to a thermal cycling profile which denatures, anneals DNA with a designated primer, and synthesis (amplification) of new DNA strands. Accessed online [81]
Figure 8(a) Principle of absorbance detection adapted by Steigert and colleagues. Reprinted with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry [92]; (b) Photograph of the CD device with the electrochemical sensor within it (left) and the schematic of the set up for electrochemical sensing. Reprinted with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry [93]; (c) Experimental set up for 3D carbon electrode dielectrophoresis and schematic of the complete set up for electrical connection. Reprinted with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry [94].
Figure 9Schematic of CD-ELISA design with 24 sets of assays. Reprinted with permission from the American Chemical Society [77].