Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis

abstract: Biological fluids contain information-rich mixtures of biochemicals and particles such as cells, proteins, and viruses. Selective and sensitive analysis of these fluids can enable clinicians to accurately diagnose a wide range of pathologies. Fluid samples such as these present an intrigui...

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Other Authors: Jones, Paul Vernon (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29892
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-298922018-06-22T03:06:12Z Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis abstract: Biological fluids contain information-rich mixtures of biochemicals and particles such as cells, proteins, and viruses. Selective and sensitive analysis of these fluids can enable clinicians to accurately diagnose a wide range of pathologies. Fluid samples such as these present an intriguing challenge to researchers; they are packed with potentially vital information, but notoriously difficult to analyze. Rapid and inexpensive analysis of blood and other bodily fluids is a topic gaining substantial attention in both science and medicine. Current limitations to many analyses include long culture times, expensive reagents, and the need for specialized laboratory facilities and personnel. Improving these tests and overcoming their limitations would allow faster and more widespread testing for disease and pathogens, potentially providing a significant advantage for healthcare in many settings. Both gradient separation techniques and dielectrophoresis can solve some of the difficulties presented by complex biological samples, thanks to selective capture, isolation, and concentration of analytes. By merging dielectrophoresis with a gradient separation-based approach, gradient insulator dielectrophoresis (g-iDEP) promises benefits in the form of rapid and specific separation of extremely similar bioparticles. High-resolution capture can be achieved by exploiting variations in the characteristic physical properties of cells and other bioparticles. Novel implementation and application of the technique has demonstrated the isolation and concentration of blood cells from a complex biological sample, differentiation of bacterial strains within a single species, and separation of antibiotic-resistant and antibiotic-susceptible bacteria. Furthermore, this approach allows simultaneous concentration of analyte, facilitating detection and downstream analysis. A theoretical description of the resolving capabilities of g-iDEP was also developed. This theory explores the relationship between experimental parameters and resolution. Results indicate the possibility of differentiating particles with dielectrophoretic mobilities that differ by as little as one part in 100,000,000, or electrophoretic mobilities differing by as little as one part in 100,000. These results indicate the potential g-iDEP holds in terms of both separatory power and the possibility for diagnostic applications. Dissertation/Thesis Jones, Paul Vernon (Author) Hayes, Mark (Advisor) Ros, Alexandra (Committee member) Herckes, Pierre (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Analytical chemistry Biophysics Biochemistry bioanalysis bioparticles dielectrophoresis electrophoresis resolution separation science eng 175 pages Doctoral Dissertation Biochemistry 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29892 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Analytical chemistry
Biophysics
Biochemistry
bioanalysis
bioparticles
dielectrophoresis
electrophoresis
resolution
separation science
spellingShingle Analytical chemistry
Biophysics
Biochemistry
bioanalysis
bioparticles
dielectrophoresis
electrophoresis
resolution
separation science
Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis
description abstract: Biological fluids contain information-rich mixtures of biochemicals and particles such as cells, proteins, and viruses. Selective and sensitive analysis of these fluids can enable clinicians to accurately diagnose a wide range of pathologies. Fluid samples such as these present an intriguing challenge to researchers; they are packed with potentially vital information, but notoriously difficult to analyze. Rapid and inexpensive analysis of blood and other bodily fluids is a topic gaining substantial attention in both science and medicine. Current limitations to many analyses include long culture times, expensive reagents, and the need for specialized laboratory facilities and personnel. Improving these tests and overcoming their limitations would allow faster and more widespread testing for disease and pathogens, potentially providing a significant advantage for healthcare in many settings. Both gradient separation techniques and dielectrophoresis can solve some of the difficulties presented by complex biological samples, thanks to selective capture, isolation, and concentration of analytes. By merging dielectrophoresis with a gradient separation-based approach, gradient insulator dielectrophoresis (g-iDEP) promises benefits in the form of rapid and specific separation of extremely similar bioparticles. High-resolution capture can be achieved by exploiting variations in the characteristic physical properties of cells and other bioparticles. Novel implementation and application of the technique has demonstrated the isolation and concentration of blood cells from a complex biological sample, differentiation of bacterial strains within a single species, and separation of antibiotic-resistant and antibiotic-susceptible bacteria. Furthermore, this approach allows simultaneous concentration of analyte, facilitating detection and downstream analysis. A theoretical description of the resolving capabilities of g-iDEP was also developed. This theory explores the relationship between experimental parameters and resolution. Results indicate the possibility of differentiating particles with dielectrophoretic mobilities that differ by as little as one part in 100,000,000, or electrophoretic mobilities differing by as little as one part in 100,000. These results indicate the potential g-iDEP holds in terms of both separatory power and the possibility for diagnostic applications. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Biochemistry 2015
author2 Jones, Paul Vernon (Author)
author_facet Jones, Paul Vernon (Author)
title Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis
title_short Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis
title_full Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis
title_fullStr Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis
title_full_unstemmed Development of a New Approach to Biophysical Separations Using Dielectrophoresis
title_sort development of a new approach to biophysical separations using dielectrophoresis
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.29892
_version_ 1718700762671874048