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Contact:
Dr. Orlin Velev,
919/513-4318
Mick Kulikowski,
News Services, 919/515-3470
Dec.
8, 2003
Researchers
Manipulate Tiny, Floating Droplets on a Chip
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
 |
The
new microfluidic chip invented by Dr. Orlin Velev,
Brian Prevo and Ketan Bhatt allows researchers
to control the movement of tiny floating droplets. |
In
an innovative study, researchers at North Carolina
State University have designed a way to control the
movement of microscopic droplets of liquid freely
floating across centimeter-sized chips packed with
electrodes. The discovery allows the performance
of new types of chemical experiments on the microscale.
The breakthrough
came as the researchers – Dr.
Orlin D. Velev, assistant professor of chemical engineering,
and two NC State doctoral students, Brian Prevo and
Ketan Bhatt – learned how to circumvent friction
by suspending the droplets of water inside a fluorinated
oil, and then using electrical voltages to allow the
liquid to hover over the electrical circuits of the
chip. Switching the chip’s electrodes on and
off – either manually or with the aid of a computer – lets
researchers move the droplets across the oil surface
to any location on the chip.
The chip also allows researchers to conduct experiments
with mixed droplets, as liquids can be moved along
different paths and then merged or encapsulated in
oil or polymer droplets.
The discovery has wide-ranging scientific implications.
Besides analyses and characterizations of chemical
samples, the chip can serve as a tiny factory, Velev
says, allowing researchers to mix droplets to test
chemical reactions, for example, or add specific amounts
of toxin to a cell to see how long it takes the cell
to die. Velev is also eager to synthesize new particle
materials or crystals inside liquids.
The research was published in the Dec. 4 edition of
Nature.
“Moving droplets of liquid on solid surfaces as other researchers have
done before us has a number of limitations,” Velev said. Other research
in moving droplets on solid surfaces was stunted by friction if particles or
solids were moved along the channels or solid surface of a chip. “But the
freely suspended droplets on this microfluidic chip never touch solid walls and
thus can act as reactors for materials synthesis or precipitation,” he
said.
Velev’s interest in microfluidic chips stems
from his lab’s work on growing self-assembling
microwires by moving gold nanoparticles with alternating
current in water, and his earlier work on using floating
droplets as assembly sites for complex particles.
“Experiments and bioassays, or determinations
of the presence or concentration of biological molecules,
that we presently do with test tubes and beakers can
now be done on the microscale. This device enlarges
the scope and capabilities in the field of microfluidics,
which is just a few years old,” Velev said.
The chip – which was simple and inexpensive
to make, Velev says, and is reusable – has received
a provisional patent, with application in place for
a full patent.
The research
is funded by Velev’s National Science
Foundation Career Award and by an ARO-Stir grant.
-
kulikowski -
Note
to editors: The first paragraph
of the paper follows.
“On-chip
Manipulation of Free Droplets”
Authors: Dr. Orlin D. Velev, Brian T. Prevo and Ketan
H. Bhatt, NC State University
Published: Dec. 4, 2003, in Nature
First
Paragraph: ‘Lab-on-a-chip’ systems resemble
factories with permanently rigged pipes, but their
prefabricated microchannels could have problems in
delivering materials such as suspended particles,
biological cells or proteins, which may adhere to
the walls and clog the channels. More flexible microfluidic
systems allow liquids to be transported as droplets
on a solid surface, but these suffer from similar
drawbacks where the droplets are in contact with
solid walls. Here we describe a liquid – liquid
microfluidic system for manipulating freely suspended
microlitre- and nanolitre-sized droplets of water
or hydrocarbon, which float on a denser, perfluorinated
oil and are driven by an alternating or constant
electric field applied by arrays of electrodes below
the oil. These microfluidic chips could be used as
a versatile tool in microscale transport and mixing
and in chemical and materials synthesis.
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