Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
875904 Medical Engineering & Physics 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present study demonstrates the design, simulation, fabrication and testing of a label-free continuous manipulation and separation micro-device of particles/biological cells suspended on medium based on conventional dielectrophoresis. The current dielectrophoretic device uses three planner electrodes to generate non-uniform electric field and induces both p-DEP and n-DEP force simultaneously depending on the dielectric properties of the particles and thus influencing at least two types of particles at a time. Numerical simulations were performed to predict the distribution of non-uniform electric field, DEP force and particle trajectories. The device is fabricated utilizing the advantage of bonding between PDMS and SU8 polymer. The p-DEP particles move away from the center of the streamline, while the n-DEP particles will follow the central streamline along the channel length. Dielectrophoretic effects were initially tested using polystyrene beads followed by manipulation of HeLa cells. In the experiment, it was observed that polystyrene beads in DI water always response as n-DEP up to 1 MHz frequency, whereas HeLa cells in PBS medium response as n-DEP up to 400 kHz frequency and then it experiences p-DEP up to 1 MHz. Further, the microscopic observations of DEP responses of HeLa cells were verified by performing trapping experiment at static condition.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Biomedical Engineering
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