| Literature DB >> 35496619 |
Vigneswaran Narayanamurthy1,2,3, Z E Jeroish4,5, K S Bhuvaneshwari4,6, Pouriya Bayat7, R Premkumar4, Fahmi Samsuri5, Mashitah M Yusoff8.
Abstract
The development of passively driven microfluidic labs on chips has been increasing over the years. In the passive approach, the microfluids are usually driven and operated without any external actuators, fields, or power sources. Passive microfluidic techniques adopt osmosis, capillary action, surface tension, pressure, gravity-driven flow, hydrostatic flow, and vacuums to achieve fluid flow. There is a great need to explore labs on chips that are rapid, compact, portable, and easy to use. The evolution of these techniques is essential to meet current needs. Researchers have highlighted the vast potential in the field that needs to be explored to develop rapid passive labs on chips to suit market/researcher demands. A comprehensive review, along with patent analysis, is presented here, listing the latest advances in passive microfluidic techniques, along with the related mechanisms and applications. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35496619 PMCID: PMC9050787 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra00263a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Trends in passive microfluidics.
Fig. 2Patent analysis of passively driven microfluidics and LOC devices.
Fig. 3Different approaches employed in passively driven microfluidics and LOC devices.
Fig. 4(i) The types of surface-tension-driven passive microfluidics in different studies, which include the recession of a drop in two phases along with a front view and side view of the microfluidic system in passive pumping (this figure has been adapted from ref. 113 with permission from ELSEVIER, copyright: 2018). (ii) A schematic diagram of surface tension driven microfluidics. The flow direction is basically determined by the radius balance of the droplets; the bold arrows in the figures denote the flow direction (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 99 with permission from IOP, copyright: 2008). (iii) Different surface-tension-driven flows: (a) pulsatile forward flow, (b) constant forward flow, (c) constant forward-flow with additional liquid packets, (d) alternating (forward/backward) flow, (e) whole-channel fluidic exchange achieved with alternating constant flow by two nozzles, and (f) instantaneous flow reversal using alternating (forward/backward) flow (this figure has been adapted from ref. 110 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright: 2012).
Recent surface-tension-driven passive pumping techniques in microfluidics
| S. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Air and water | PDMS, SU-8 photoresist | 10 μl min−1 | Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids were handled | A computational model was studied alone | Disposable microfluidic biochips |
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| 2 | Water | PDMS | Pipette or syringe | 1.25 μl s−1 | Easy interfacing | Evaporation occurs | Small labs and high-throughput assaying systems |
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| 3 | Fluorescent spheres in DI water | PDMS | Pipette | Constant flow rate | Evaporation is a slow process | Biological or chemical application |
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| 4 | Red and green fluorescent spheres in DI water | PDMS | Pipette | Simple and portable | The mixing process begins only after the merging of liquids | Micro total analysis system |
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| 5 | Pure oleic acid and water | PDMS moulds with glass | Syringe pump | Reduced use of reagent | Droplet symmetric is corrected only with the asymmetric flow | High-throughput screening |
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| 6 | Pure methanol | PDMS | 2 ml min−1 | Tough transportation of methanol in a few hours | Small-scale DMFCs for portable electronics |
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| 7 | PDMS, SU-8 photoresist | Micropipette | Practically analyzed and long lasting | Increase in the output pressure decreases flow | Cell studies |
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| 8 | Cell culture medium with protein | PDMS | Pipette | 34.6 nl s−1 to 16.6 μl s−1 | Highly parallel arrays with 3D cell cultures are employed | Not applicable to high-density valve arrays | Diagnostics and drug development |
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| 9 | Mixture of DI water & fluorescent particles | PDMS | Pipette | Backflow due to flow rotation of outlet liquid |
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| 10 | DI water and methanol | PDMS | Pipette | 85 nl s−1 to 196 nl s−1 | Geometrical properties can affect the flow rate | LOC devices |
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| 11 | DPBS with FITC dextran (culture medium) | PDMS | Pipette | Easily adaptable with high throughput | Gradient generation is affected by fluid viscosity | Biological and drug discovery applications |
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| 12 | PDMS | Automated fluid delivery system | 4 ml min−1 | No substrate bonding is required | Flow rates are limited by device dimension | Cell culture and biological applications |
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| 13 | Fluorescent beads | PDMS | Automated fluid delivery system | 4 ml min−1 | No substrate bonding is required | Control of flow direction is difficult | Biological applications, drug-cell studies |
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| 14 | Blood or plasma mixed with glycerol | PDMS | Pipette | Minimal reagent consumption, and waste generation | Drastic decrease in flow rate over time | Immunoassays and LOC |
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| 15 | Saline | PDMS | Pipette | 2.35 μl min−1 | Particle counting is done within the system | External power source is required for counting | POC or diagnostic MFD |
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| 16 | Normal urine, mammary gland epithelial cells | PDMS | Pipette or automated liquid handling system | Reduced number of cells and reagents are required | Reagents with different viscosity or surface tension should be optimized | Screening in cell culture and biological cell-based assay |
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| 17 | Neutrophils, tumor cells, stem cell, neurons, and bacterial cells | Glass substrate with PDMS mould | Pipette | Manipulation of fluid flow, and real-time monitoring of the cells | Complicated microfabrication process | Chemotaxis, stem cell differentiation, and endothelial cell migration |
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| 18 | PDMS | Pipette | Low reagent consumption and easy to fabricate | Low efficiency | Food and remote military operations, home healthcare |
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| 19 | PBS with red and green food colorant | PDMS | Pipette | Cell population can be patterned | Mixing of sample | Wound-healing assay |
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| 20 | Green, yellow and blue dyes | PDMS | 4 ml min−1 | High flow rates are observed | Designing of small channel is tough | Cell-based assays |
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| 21 | Axon, DI water | PDMS, parylene | Pipette | ∼0.63 μl s−1 | Flexible and user convenient | The same chemical concentration | Axonal guidance studies |
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| 22 | Bone marrow stromal cells | Polymer sheets | Micropipette | Separation of cells is comparatively good | Increased space requirement | Microscale metabolomics |
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| 23 | Water | Micropumps | 4 ml min−1 | Straight forward implementation of channels | Radii of the droplet vary | Drug delivery and cell biology |
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Fig. 5(i) (a) An integrated human-powered pumping system. By pushing the deformable chamber, mechanical pressure infuses the solution from the inlets to the outlets; (i) (b) the pumping procedure of the finger-powered pump with push-and-release actions. (ii) Fabrication via a multilayer soft lithography process; (ii) (a–f) the device consists of three layers of PDMS; (ii) (g) a fabricated PDMS pumping system; (ii) (h) a fabricated prototype via the injection moulding process (figures (i) and (ii) have been adapted from ref. 127 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright: 2014). (iii) Suction-cup-driven equipment-free fluid pumping: (a–d) finger-triggered pumping and reversible integration of the PDMS suction cup to the MFD (figure (iii) has been reproduced from ref. 132 with permission from SPRINGER, copyright: 2018). (iv) A self-powered imbibing microfluidic pump by liquid encapsulation (SIMPLE): (a) sequential pump operation and (b) an experimental presentation. (c) Initially, the chip is prefilled with the working liquid (blue) through the inlet denoted by 25 thick blue arrows and encapsulated by impermeable protective foil patches (green circles). Before activation, the foil is removed, the sample (red) is deposited over the inlet hole, and temporary finger force can activate the pump. When the working liquid touches the paper, the finger can be removed, and the pump is activated. The pump works until the working liquid saturates the paper or until all of the fluid has been sucked into the paper (figure (iv) has been adapted from ref. 129 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright: 2014).
Recent pressure-driven approaches in passively driven microfluidics
| S. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sodium hydroxide and ethyl alcohol | PDMS membrane | Syringe pump | Minimum chances of clogging, fouling, and loss of sample | Increased in the complexity of flow | Biochemistry analysis, drug delivery |
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| 2 | PDMS | 1 μl min−1 | Flow rate can be tailored based on channel height | Low flow rate | Biochemical analysis systems |
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| 3 | Plasma | PDMS | Used where the electro-osmotic pumping is not feasible | Miniaturization of Si valves was difficult | Disposable diagnostic and drug screening applications |
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| 4 | Incompressible Newtonian fluid | Limited by their total length |
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| 5 | Fluorescent-labeled beads, rabbit blood | Pre-polymer, glass | Pipette | 10 and 20 μl min−1 | Eliminates the need for centrifuging principle | Drug delivery, cell culture |
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| 6 | Water | Pressure drop in the microchannel in high | LOC |
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| 7 | Incompressible Newtonian liquids | Both active and passive mixing are required | Drug delivery, DNA hybridization |
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| 8 | Microbeads, blood | PDMS | Syringe pump | Inexpensive, fast and sensitive for fluid flow | Difficult to integrate with POC | Immunoassay |
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| 9 | Water with red-coloured dye | Glass slide | 3–4 kPa pressure alone is required | External pressure is required | POC diagnostics |
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| 10 | Viscous liquid | PDMS | Syringe pump | 500 μl min−1 | Highly stable | Detection of air-borne contaminants |
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| 11 | Culture media | PDMS | Micropipette | Efficient, user-friendly | Drug discovery |
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| 12 | Drug of interest | Polyamide | Drug loading pump | 40 μl min−1 | Requires no additional valves to assist the flow | Constant dosage | Cochlear drug delivery system |
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| 13 | Rabbit blood | PDMS, parylene | Microneedle | Simple | Needs to be operated in pneumatic platforms | Biosensor chip |
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| 14 | Green-dyed water | 3-Layered PDMS | Pipette | 3.75 times greater than water flow | Transportation of singular fluids is possible | Pressure varies due to the use of different fingers | Point of care and disposable biomedical equipment |
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| 15 | Deionised water | PDMS | Syringe | 0.089 to 4 nl s−1 | Syringe supplies pressure source to drive | POC pumping system |
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| 16 | Blue and red dyed water | PDMS | Syringe or pipette | 0.07, 0.12 and 0.17 μl s−1 | Combined with the hydrophobic polymer system to stay stable | Speed decreases with filling the channel | Point of care diagnosis |
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| 17 | Endothelial cell (human) | PDMS | Pipette | 10–100 ml h−1 | Physiological levels of flow can be regulated | Dependency on height | Cell-based applications |
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| 18 | Layers of PEI for the rigid structure | Electronic dose control | 13–18 μl min−1 | Increased efficiency within the system | Reduction in system pressure is tough | Hair-cell regeneration therapy |
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| 19 | Umbilical vein endothelial cells | PDMS | Pipette | 950 μl min−1 | Easy distribution of pressure | Cell culture in drug discovery and point of care |
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| 20 | PDMS with oxygen plasma treatment | 1.42 ml min−1 | Constant flow rate under the sinusoidally varying signal is seen | POC diagnostic devices |
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| 21 | Microparticle stock solution with DEX | CAD design for channels | Pipette or syringe | 1.55 μl min−1 | Mono-dispersed droplet formation is achieved | Cell analysis, cell-based assays |
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| 22 | Sterile sputum | PDMS | Micropipette | 4 ml min−1 | High recovery rate of leukocytes | Pulmonary diseases detection |
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| 23 | Phosphate buffer | PDMS | Syringe pump | 80 μl min−1 | Rapid fluid mixing | Enzyme-based assay |
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| 24 | Dyed deionized water and mineral oil | PDMS | Pressing and releasing cup | Increasing flow rate | Simple and effective. Fabrication of cup is easy | Diameter of the cup stops the flow | Resource-limited applications |
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| 25 | Glycerol diluted in water | PVC and PMMA | Finger activation | 0.5–150 μl min−1 | Drug delivery applications |
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| 26 | Ethyl alcohol, acetone | PDMS | Teflon tube to release air | 30.56–33.98 μl min−1 | Increased flexibility and independent | Immunoassays |
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Fig. 6(i) Osmotic pump schematic diagram (this figure has been adapted from ref. 147 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright: 2009). (ii) Osmotic pump operation (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 57 with permission from Wiley, copyright: 2014). (iii) An operational diagram of the system, including the pump unit and the Poiseuille flow with constant wall shear stress (this figure has been adapted from ref. 148 with permission from IOS Press, copyright: 2010). (iv) Experimental setup with four components, namely concentration gradient, pipette tips, osmotic pumps and coiled tube (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 146 with permission from Alpha Med Press, copyright: 2009). (v) A microfluidic fuel cell (MFFC) system using an osmotic pump (this figure has been adapted from ref. 149 with permission from IOP, copyright: 2018).
Recent osmotic-driven passive pumping techniques in microfluidics
| S. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sieved particles | PDMS and natural rubber | Dropper | 17 μl min−1 | Can be placed directly on a microdevice | Reactivation of pump requires water | Finds the application in portable devices |
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| 2 | PDMS chamber | Syringe | 0.33 μl min−1 | Low flow rate is used for constant refreshing of culture medium | Regular refreshing of osmotic reagent | Microfluidic flow injection system |
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| 3 | Cholera toxin subunit B | PDMS cubic chambers | Micro-pipette | 0.15 μl h−1 | Provides the concentration gradient for more than a week | Low flow rate | Basic and translational research areas such as stem cell differentiation research and long-term cell culture |
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Fig. 7(i) Schematic diagrams of a microfluidic device for self-propelled continuous-flow PCR: (a) concept diagram; (b) a cross-sectional view of the microfluidic device. (c) A photograph of the fabricated microfluidic device (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 182 with permission from Elsevier, copyright: 2015). (ii) A yarn flow resistance (YFR)-regulated microflow control system: (a) a schematic diagram showing the siphon effects in the yarn-capillary-resistance-driven micropump system; (b) a schematic diagram of the water-head-difference-driven siphon effect controlled by the YFR; (c) a photographic image of a yarn capillary regulator; (d) the microfluidic device prepared with a YFR (this figure has been adapted from ref. 130 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright: 2014).
Updates on capillary-based passive pumping in microfluidics
| S. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bovine serum albumin | Flat PDMS | Pipette | 220 nl s−1 | Free from dead volumes | Flow rate quickly reduces | Portable diagnostics, biological assays |
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| 2 | Fluorescein ethanol | PDMS and glass surfaces | Syringe | Simple hardware setup and easy to operate | Depends on the contact angle for sample loading | Biological or chemical analysis |
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| 3 | Deionised water | PDMS | Pipette | Clogging at the confluence is prevented | Liquid propagation is done only after the emergence |
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| 4 | Ethanol | PDMS and Pyrex glass tube | Syringe | Interface motion can be predicted easily | Assumption of a constant value | Disposable on-site diagnostic system |
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| 5 | Food colorant | PDMS | Pipette | 0.2–3.7 nl s−1 | Controlled manner of filling to prevent the collapse | Presence of the resistance | Bioanalytics |
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| 6 | Distilled water | PDMS | Pipette | Controls the speed of the autonomous capillary flow | Experiments were entirely done on distilled water | Total analysis systems or LOCs |
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| 7 | PDMS and PC chips | Longevity is achieved | PC and PDMS chips were made by air plasma treatment |
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| 8 | PDMS with glass slides | 1 μl min−1 | Constant flow rate for more than an hour | LOC devices |
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| 9 | Human serum with CRP | PDMS and glass | Pipette | 82 nl min−1 | Different interface shapes in the PDMS channels | Presence of Laplace pressure stops the flow | Detection of c-reactive protein (CRP) |
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| 10 | Dyed water | PDMS and PMMA | Highly efficient for particle separation | Different channel size is required for different particle filtration | Blood filtration, LOC system |
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| 11 | PDMS | Automated liquid handling systems | Reduce cost and reagent supply |
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| 12 | Blood | PDMS material | Simple to use, flexible and robust | Only about 20 nl of plasma is extracted | POC diagnosis |
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| 13 | Cellulose powder | PDMS and glass surfaces | Pipette | Detection of glucose, protein, and cholesterol | Poor device-to-device reproducibility | Bioanalytical applications or POC diagnostics |
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| 14 | Milk sample | Acrylic resin | Pipette | 60 and 110 μl s−1 | Refill without drying the center channel | Decreased sensitivity | Food analysis and drug discovery |
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| 15 | Bovine serum albumin | PDMS | Pipette | Device to device repeatability is well defined | Pressure prediction at each step is required | Biochemical assays and immunoassays |
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| 16 | PDMS | Due to the rotational speed | Does not require surface treatment | POC diagnosis |
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| 17 | Blood | PDMS mould | Injection moulded | Mostly unidirectional | Error comes from the milling process | Point of care |
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| 18 | PMMA plate | Pipette or micro-needle | Capillary motion of the blood is monitored | Increase in viscosity when velocity decreases | POC diagnosis and home care systems |
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| 19 | Blood | PDMS | Micro-pipette | Increased amount of extracted plasma | Numerous valves are required | POC diagnostics |
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| 20 | Plasma | PDMS | Sweat | 7.3 × 10−3 to 1.2 × 10−1 μl min−1 | Prolonged flow due to evaporation | Leads to local flow near the inlet | Wearable sweat-sensing device |
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| 21 | Dyed water | PDMS and PMMA | Syringe pump | Separation time is lower | Bend region and the bend angle should be maintained properly | Bioengineering applications and point of care |
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| 22 | Blood | Injection-moulded chip made of COP | Micro-needle | Prevents accidental blood projections induced by forced flow actuation | Leakage can occur based on the substrate materials | Used in haemeagglutination |
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| 23 | PDMS | Syringe pump | 1.2 ml min−1 | Increased stability with a large interface area | Very expensive | Used in the creation of wall-less channels |
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| 24 | Water in oil | PDMS | Solvent delivery systems | 3 to 60 μl min−1 | Flexible manipulation of droplets within the channels | Instability of the droplets that are generated | Drug delivery systems |
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| 25 | Microbeads | PDMS | Syringe-assisted vacuum pumping | Decreased backflow is observed | Non-Newtonian samples do not give a proper assessment | POC or LOC testing applications |
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| 26 | PDMS | Injector | 0.865 μl s−1 | Increase in height increases the self-flowing speed within the channel | Decreased flow due to the rough surface | POC or LOC testing applications |
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| 27 | Red dye in deionized water | PCB fabricated chip | Pipette | 138 μl min−1 | Low-cost, electronic-based disposable analytical platforms | POC diagnosis and LOC equipment |
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| 28 | Acrylamide | Micropads | Syringe pump | Robust in nature | Energy, electronics, medicine, food or cosmetics |
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| 29 | Neuronal cells | 3D micropores | Syringe pump | 2–2.5 μl min−1 | Compactable to microscope focusing used in optical tracking | Flow speed cannot be tightly controlled | Brain-on-a-chip |
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| 30 | Mineral oil, silicone oil | Syringe pump | 0.005 μl min−1 | Flexible and reliable, providing possibilities for mono-dispersed droplet-based studies | Presence of viscous and shearing forces | Cell encapsulation and protein crystallization |
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| 31 | Streptavidin-coated fluorescent particles | PVP | Pipette | Three-dimensional cell focusing and on-chip cell sorting | Combines multiple features for analyses | Diagnosing and monitoring clinical conditions |
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| 32 | Neuronal cells | PDMS or glass of choice | Pipette | UV-curable alternative material for low-cost microfluidic chip applications | Tougher analysis of human neural network | Cell capture and cell culture application |
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Fig. 8(i) (A) A compact, simple, and disposable device for passively driven sperm sorting; (B) fluid flow used to sort sperm based on their ability to cross the passively driven laminar fluid stream created by a hydrostatic pressure difference between the inlet and outlet (this figure has been adapted from ref. 186 with permission from ACS Publications, copyright: 2003). (C) A compact, passively driven microfluidic device with a side-view and top-view schematic diagram of the generation of hydrostatic pressure differences (this figure has been adapted from ref. 198 with permission from Springer, copyright: 2007). (D) The junction showing sperm movement from an input (reservoir 2) to an outlet (reservoir 3) (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 199 with permission from ELSEVIER, copyright: 2015). (ii) (a, b) Illustrations of pipette Petri dish single-cell trapping (PP-SCT) or tilt microfluidic trapping; (c, d) the side and top view, respectively, where θ is the tilt angle, h is the height of the inlet, D is the distance between the biochip outlet side edge to the Petri dish wall along the diameter, and Sl is the glass slide length (this figure has been adapted from ref. 196 with permission from MDPI, copyright: 2018).
Recent developments in gravity-based passive pumping in microfluidics
| S. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Semen | PDMS | 0.008 μl s−1 | Readily fabricated device | Very low flow rate | Vitro fertilization procedures |
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| 2 | Semen | PDMS, glass | Pipette | ∼20 ± 40 μl h−1 | Inexpensive, portable, easy to use, and disposable | Does not isolate every motile sperm effectively | Chemical and biological analysis, immunoassay |
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| 3 | Blood, physiological salt solution | Silicon laminated with resin | Pipette, syringe | One-stroke fabrication of grooves for channels | Combining the laminar flows at the microchannel is difficult | Biology and molecular genetics |
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| 4 | Fluorescein dissolved in BSA solution | PDMS | Tubing | 1 ml h−1 | Continuous particle separation is achieved | Increasing the flow rate will lead to low purity separation for a larger drop | Ultrasound imaging |
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| 5 | DMEM with no drug | PDMS, glass | Pipette | 50 μl per day | Multiple culture plates can be incubated | Requires specialized equipment for cell loading | Cell-based screening, cytotoxicity assay |
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| 6 | Blood and lysing buffer | PMMA | Efficient lysis of RBC with simple structure | Cellular debris cleaning should be done constantly | Clinical genetics, diagnostics |
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| 7 | Dimethyl silicone oil | PDMS | Turntable and infusion set | Droplet generation, transport, collision, fusion, mixing, and stopping are possible | Hard to generate droplets for a long period | Cell research and high-content drug screening |
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| 8 | Cell culture medium | Multilayers of PDMS | Prevents formation of air bubbles, up to 3 days of operation | Nutrient depletion and accumulation of waste affects the viability of cells | Prediction of drug toxicity, cell culture |
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| 9 | DMEM with 10% FBS | PDMS membrane | Injection | Long-term maintenance of HSEs for drug testing purposes | Unstable flow rate with decreasing reservoir volume | Skin drug testing studies |
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| 10 | 650 μl min−1 | Evaluate drugs under fluidic cell culture conditions |
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| 11 | Human cervical carcinoma and embryonic kidney cells | PDMS | Pipette | 375 μl min−1 | Highly beneficial as the rare cells are trapped | Non-uniform distributions of fluidic velocities and pressure drops | Signalling pathway activation, and inhibition (in SCA) |
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| 12 | Water | Increased particle trapping on using a serpentine channel | Single-cell trapping based on the interest |
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| 13 | Motile and non-motile sperm, water | PDMS, glass | Syringe | Highly compatible | Flow is dependent on the difference in height of the source reservoir | Cell culture |
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| 14 | Trypan blue and lung cancer cells (A549) | Glass substrate | Mechanical obstacles | 0.25–4 ml s−1 | Highly efficient single-cell trapping | Area density of single-cell arrays are reduced | Genomics, proteomics, secretomics |
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Fig. 9A pumpless MFD. (A) A schematic 3-D image of the PL MFD, showing the sample tank, tissue inlet, resistance circuit, and sample outlet, and an enlarged view of the portion encompassing the tissue chamber. (B) Pictures of the device. On the right, a closer view of the tissue chamber and resistance circuit. (C) A low-lateral view of the device demonstrating the medium-flow route, finally dropping down to the collecting dish (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 205 with permission from Springer, copyright: 2017).
Recent works on hydrostatic pressure-driven passive pumping technique in microfluidics
| S. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Indicator dye with blood | Micropipette or syringe | 99 nl s−1 | Low cost, portable | Equilibrium constant affects the flow rate | Blood plasma separations, blood typing, qualitative immunoassays |
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| 2 | DNA sample, blood | Plastic | Prediction for high-viscosity solutions is difficult | Drug discovery, toxicology |
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| 3 | Human dermal fibroblast neonatal cells | Silicon tubing and syringe | 0.1–10 ml min−1 | Constant flow rate is achieved | Can control only a slow perfusion rate and not suitable for all cells | Development of artificial skin and long-term cell-culture |
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| 4 | Sperm with phosphate buffered solution | PDMS | Self-movement | Alignment and orientation of the sperm is possible | Height change in the reservoirs disturbs the fluid flow | Clinical labs |
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| 5 | Mouse testis tissue | PDMS | Micropipette | 0.05 μl min−1 | Constant flow rate for a long range is observed | Tissue culture and organ culture |
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Fig. 10A hybrid PDMS utilizing permeability and capillary effects for fluid flow (this figure has been reproduced from ref. 225 with permission from IOP, copyright: 2009).
Fig. 11(i) Blood separation utilizing gas solubility and the permeability of PDMS. [A] Self-priming, self-contained, tether-free SIMBAS. [B] Schematic diagrams of the proposed device. (B-a) An overview of the experimental setup using the proposed device. The top layer is a PDMS cover with an inlet and a tape-sealed outlet, and is bonded irreversibly with a bottom fluidic layer. (B-b) A top view and cross-section view. The separation chamber is divided into ten segments of equal volumes by nine phase guides at the bottom. Cylindrical posts are used to prevent the collapse of the pneumatic chamber when it is evacuated by the manual syringes. w and S stand for the PDMS wall thickness and the overlap area between the pneumatic chamber A and the separation chamber, respectively. The overlap area (S), where the flux of air diffuses, is calculated from the overlap length (l) multiplied by the chamber height (h). Drawings are not to scale. (B-c) Experimental steps. (ii) Different types of vacuum-driven power-free micro-pumping methods utilizing the gas solubility or permeability of PDMS. (A-1) A 2D micro-pumping design utilizing the gas solubility of PDMS. A whole PDMS device is pre-evacuated in a vacuum environment. (A-2) A 3D micro-pumping design utilizing the gas solubility of PDMS. A PDMS slab is pre-evacuated in a vacuum environment. See also Fig. 1A. (B-1) A 3D micro-pumping design utilizing the gas permeability of PDMS. External vacuum pumps are connected to the ports in the control channels. (B-2) A 2D micro-pumping design utilizing the gas permeability of PDMS. A hand-held syringe can generate a vacuum environment (figures (i) and (ii) have been adapted from ref. 214 with permission from the Royal Society of Chemistry, copyright: 2015).
Recent works on vacuum/permeation driven passive pumping in microfluidics
| Sl. no | Analytes used | Materials used | Auxiliaries involved | Flow rate | Mechanisms used | Advantages | Disadvantages | Applications | Ref. no |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Aqueous fluorescent buffers spiked with fluorescein | PDMS | Syringe | Degassed driven flow | Efficient at eliminating air bubbles | Channel networks are complex in construction |
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| 2 | Fluorescent particle solution diluted with deionized water | PDMS | Micropipette | 0.5–2 nl s−1 | Degassed driven flow | Efficient deposition and two analyses can be conducted on both sides | Not suitable for continuous operations | Point-of-care, single-use analytical devices |
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| 3 | Human serum enriched with CRP | PDMS with SU-8 photoresist and glass | Pipette | 3–5 nl s−1 | Degassed driven flow | Fast assay time is achieved | Usage of deionized water for dilution | Solution mixing and electrophoresis |
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| 4 | Blood | PDMS | 0.5–2 nl min−1 | Degassed driven flow | Blood analysis is computed within 10 minutes | Evacuation of the channel is necessary | POC diagnosis |
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| 5 | Blue food colouring dye | PDMS placed on glass slides | Micropipette | 0.2 to 3 nl s−1 | Degassed driven flow | Degassing time is very high | Lab-on-a-chip devices |
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| 6 | Food dye solution | PDMS | PDMS pump slab, micropipette | Degassed driven flow | Pump slab must be evacuated overnight | LOC devices and point-of-care diagnostic |
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| 7 | Blood (rabbit) | PDMS | Micro-needle | Degassed driven flow | Point-of-care diagnosis |
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| 8 | Bovine serum | PDMS | Sequential injection | Degassed driven flow | No need for surface treatment | Pumping power decreases at a faster rate | Point-of-care diagnosis |
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| 9 | Plastic pipette tips | Degassed driven flow | Self-powered and portable for easy convenience | Fluctuation of the flow rate is seen | Droplet-based applications in in-field analysis |
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| 10 | Cotton threads | Injection moulded | 2.2 ± 0.1 μl s−1 | Degassed driven flow | Simple, fast, cheap and reliable in their application | Loss of samples remains unavoidable |
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| 11 | Food dye solution | PDMS, glass substrate | 0.92 μl min−1 | Degassed driven flow | Longer pumping duration towards the outlet | Immediate decay is possible due to diffusion | Applications with longer working period |
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| 12 | Aqueous/oil microdroplet | PDMS | Pipette | 250 μl h−1 | Degassed driven flow | Dramatic improvement of pumping performance | Bubble generation is observed under vacuum desiccators | Autonomous microdroplet-generation/transport and biometrics |
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| 13 | Dye | PDMS | Pipette | Degassed driven flow | Inexpensive in their construction and implementation | Highly expensive at their maintenance and insufficient instrumentation | Assay, protein crystallization, drug discovery, and combinatorial chemistry |
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| 14 | Water droplet | PDMS on glass | Injector | Permeation driven flow | Adhesion is achieved through low pressure | Mixture of liquids cannot be driven | Concentrate colloids and crystallize those particles |
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| 15 | Water droplet | PDMS with two fluid reservoirs | Pipette | Permeation driven flow | Formation of layered microstructures at the center due to permeability | Bead stacking, chemical concentration, and passive pumping |
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| 16 | Red, blue, and green coloured fluids | PDMS | Syringe | 200 nl min−1 | Permeation driven flow | Bubble-free flow throughout the membrane | Complete filling of the channels is required | Drug delivery and micro total analysis |
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| 17 | Dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) | PDMS with autopsy needle | Syringe | Permeation driven flow | Multiple fluids can be integrated | Bioanalytical application |
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| 18 | Plasma of blood | PDMS and glass slide | Syringe | Diffusion | Improved accuracy and precision | Evaporation effects were witnessed | Drug screening |
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