| Literature DB >> 33273691 |
Vitaly V Ryzhkov1, Alexander V Zverev1,2, Vladimir V Echeistov1,2, Mikhail Andronic1, Ilya A Ryzhikov1,3, Igor A Budashov4, Arkadiy V Eremenko5, Ilya N Kurochkin4,5, Ilya A Rodionov6,7.
Abstract
Nanoparticles and biological molecules high throughput robust separation is of significant interest in many healthcare and nanoscience industrial applications. In this work, we report an on-chip automatic efficient separation and preconcentration method of dissimilar sized particles within a microfluidic platform using integrated membrane valves controlled microfiltration. Micro-sized E. coli bacteria are sorted from nanoparticles and preconcentrated on a microfluidic chip with six integrated pneumatic valves (sub-100 nL dead volume) using hydrophilic PVDF filter with 0.45 μm pore diameter. The proposed on-chip automatic sorting sequence includes a sample filtration, dead volume washout and retentate backflush in reverse flow. We showed that pulse backflush mode and volume control can dramatically increase microparticles sorting and preconcentration efficiency. We demonstrate that at the optimal pulse backflush regime a separation efficiency of E. coli cells up to 81.33% at a separation throughput of 120.45 μL/min can be achieved. A trimmed mode when the backflush volume is twice smaller than the initial sample results in a preconcentration efficiency of E. coli cells up to 121.96% at a throughput of 80.93 μL/min. Finally, we propose a cyclic on-chip preconcentration method which demonstrates E. coli cells preconcentration efficiency of 536% at a throughput of 1.98 μL/min and 294% preconcentration efficiency at a 10.9 μL/min throughput.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33273691 PMCID: PMC7713219 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-78298-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Microfluidic separation chip with six valves on stage holder. (b) Valve opening/closing diagram at each step of the chip operation algorithm. (c) The principle of micro- and nanoparticles separation using filtration. (d) Microfluidic chip structure by layers. (e) The separation algorithm sequence.
Figure 2(a) Fabrication technology of multilayer microfluidic chip integrated with pneumatic valves. (b) Valve operation scheme.
Figure 3Scheme (a) and photography (b) of the experimental setup.
E. coli separation experiment results.
| # | Initial concentration C | Filtration pressure P | Backflush mode | Retentate concentration C | Separation efficiency/preconcentration efficiency E | Separation throughput T |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4.81 | 500 | Constant.1 mL | 1.615 | 33.59 | 46.96 |
| 2 | 5.81 | 900 | Constant.2 mL | 1.246 | 21.45 | 157.69 |
| 3 | 4.81 | 900 | Constant.1 mL | 2.324 | 48.34 | 113.26 |
| 4 | 5.81 | 900 | Constant.1 mL | 2.367 | 40.75 | 110.09 |
| 5 | 5.81 | 900 | Constant.0.5 mL | 4.741 | 81.61 | 70.19 |
| 6 | 4.81 | 1000 | Constant.1 mL | 1.831 | 38.09 | 125.10 |
| 7 | 5.25 | 1000 | Constant.0.5 mL | 6.397 | 80.93 | |
| 8 | 5.81 | 900 | Pulse.2 mL | 2.022 | 34.81 | 164.22 |
| 9 | 4.81 | 900 | Pulse.1 mL | 2.755 | 57.31 | 121.97 |
| 10 | 5.81 | 900 | Pulse.1 mL | 2.496 | 42.97 | 123.03 |
| 11 | 5.25 | 900 | Pulse.1 mL | 3.295 | 62.82 | 123.45 |
| 12 | 5.22 | 900 | Pulse.1 mL | 2.151 | 41.20 | 124.58 |
| 13 | 5.25 | 900 | Pulse.1 mL | 4.266 | 81.33 | 120.42 |
| 14 | 5.81 | 900 | Pulse.0.5 mL | 5.172 | 81.36 | |
| 15 | 5.25 | 1000 | Pulse.1 mL | 2.518 | 48.01 | 139.64 |
| 16 | 4.81 | 1000 | Pulse.1 mL | 2.906 | 60.45 | 140.80 |
| 17 | 5.25 | 1000 | Pulse.1 mL | 2.129 | 40.59 | 138.67 |
| 18 | 5.25 | 1000 | Pulse.0.5 mL | 6.054 | 89.07 |
Figure 4E. coli separation and preconcentration graphs. (a) Separation efficiency results with various filtration pressures. (b) Preconcentration efficiency with various backflush volume. (c) Calibration curve for 595 nm wavelength. Dropwise preconcentration of (d) 5·105 cells/mL sample in low-pressure regime, (e) 8·105 cells/mL sample in low-pressure regime, (f) 5·106 cells/mL sample in optimized regime.