Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets

The separation of biological cells using non-chemical methods is important to many areas of medicine and biology. Filtration through microstructured constrictions is one such method where cells can be separated by a combination of size and deformability. This technique, however, is limited by unpre...

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Main Author: McFaul, Sarah Marie
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39858
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-398582014-03-26T03:38:30Z Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets McFaul, Sarah Marie The separation of biological cells using non-chemical methods is important to many areas of medicine and biology. Filtration through microstructured constrictions is one such method where cells can be separated by a combination of size and deformability. This technique, however, is limited by unpredictable variations of the filter hydrodynamic resistance as cells accumulate in the microstructure. Applying a reverse flow to unclog the filter will undo the separation and reduce filter selectivity because of the reversibility of low-Reynolds number flow. This work introduces a microfluidic structural ratchet mechanism to separate cells using oscillatory flow through a 2-dimensional array of funnel-shaped structures. Devices are fabricated using multi-layer soft lithography of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and flow is controlled using pressure sources and on-chip membrane valves. An iterative procedure of design and testing is used to produce a final device which is characterized by the sorting and separation of L1210 mouse lymphoma cells (MLCs), peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from healthy donors, as well as polystyrene microparticles. The ability of this mechanism to sort and separate cells/particles based on size and deformability is investigated and confirmed. Additionally, the spatial distribution of cells after sorting is demonstrated to be repeatable and the separation process is shown to be irreversible. This mechanism can be applied generally to separate cells that differ by size and/or deformability. 2012-01-03T18:10:50Z 2012-01-03T18:10:50Z 2011 2012-01-03 2012-05 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39858 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description The separation of biological cells using non-chemical methods is important to many areas of medicine and biology. Filtration through microstructured constrictions is one such method where cells can be separated by a combination of size and deformability. This technique, however, is limited by unpredictable variations of the filter hydrodynamic resistance as cells accumulate in the microstructure. Applying a reverse flow to unclog the filter will undo the separation and reduce filter selectivity because of the reversibility of low-Reynolds number flow. This work introduces a microfluidic structural ratchet mechanism to separate cells using oscillatory flow through a 2-dimensional array of funnel-shaped structures. Devices are fabricated using multi-layer soft lithography of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and flow is controlled using pressure sources and on-chip membrane valves. An iterative procedure of design and testing is used to produce a final device which is characterized by the sorting and separation of L1210 mouse lymphoma cells (MLCs), peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from healthy donors, as well as polystyrene microparticles. The ability of this mechanism to sort and separate cells/particles based on size and deformability is investigated and confirmed. Additionally, the spatial distribution of cells after sorting is demonstrated to be repeatable and the separation process is shown to be irreversible. This mechanism can be applied generally to separate cells that differ by size and/or deformability.
author McFaul, Sarah Marie
spellingShingle McFaul, Sarah Marie
Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
author_facet McFaul, Sarah Marie
author_sort McFaul, Sarah Marie
title Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
title_short Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
title_full Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
title_fullStr Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
title_full_unstemmed Physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
title_sort physical cell separation using microfluidic funnel ratchets
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39858
work_keys_str_mv AT mcfaulsarahmarie physicalcellseparationusingmicrofluidicfunnelratchets
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