Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays

A novel design based on electric field-free open microwell arrays for the automated continuous-flow sorting of single or small clusters of cells is presented. The main feature of the proposed device is the parallel analysis of cell-cell and cell-particle interactions in each microwell of the array....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Duqi, Enri
Other Authors: Franchi Scarselli, Eleonora
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/4778/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-47782014-11-20T04:54:04Z Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays Duqi, Enri ING-INF/01 Elettronica A novel design based on electric field-free open microwell arrays for the automated continuous-flow sorting of single or small clusters of cells is presented. The main feature of the proposed device is the parallel analysis of cell-cell and cell-particle interactions in each microwell of the array. High throughput sample recovery with a fast and separate transfer from the microsites to standard microtiter plates is also possible thanks to the flexible printed circuit board technology which permits to produce cost effective large area arrays featuring geometries compatible with laboratory equipment. The particle isolation is performed via negative dielectrophoretic forces which convey the particles’ into the microwells. Particles such as cells and beads flow in electrically active microchannels on whose substrate the electrodes are patterned. The introduction of particles within the microwells is automatically performed by generating the required feedback signal by a microscope-based optical counting and detection routine. In order to isolate a controlled number of particles we created two particular configurations of the electric field within the structure. The first one permits their isolation whereas the second one creates a net force which repels the particles from the microwell entrance. To increase the parallelism at which the cell-isolation function is implemented, a new technique based on coplanar electrodes to detect particle presence was implemented. A lock-in amplifying scheme was used to monitor the impedance of the channel perturbed by flowing particles in high-conductivity suspension mediums. The impedance measurement module was also combined with the dielectrophoretic focusing stage situated upstream of the measurement stage, to limit the measured signal amplitude dispersion due to the particles position variation within the microchannel. In conclusion, the designed system complies with the initial specifications making it suitable for cellomics and biotechnology applications. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Franchi Scarselli, Eleonora Guerrieri, Roberto 2012-04-30 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/4778/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic ING-INF/01 Elettronica
spellingShingle ING-INF/01 Elettronica
Duqi, Enri
Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays
description A novel design based on electric field-free open microwell arrays for the automated continuous-flow sorting of single or small clusters of cells is presented. The main feature of the proposed device is the parallel analysis of cell-cell and cell-particle interactions in each microwell of the array. High throughput sample recovery with a fast and separate transfer from the microsites to standard microtiter plates is also possible thanks to the flexible printed circuit board technology which permits to produce cost effective large area arrays featuring geometries compatible with laboratory equipment. The particle isolation is performed via negative dielectrophoretic forces which convey the particles’ into the microwells. Particles such as cells and beads flow in electrically active microchannels on whose substrate the electrodes are patterned. The introduction of particles within the microwells is automatically performed by generating the required feedback signal by a microscope-based optical counting and detection routine. In order to isolate a controlled number of particles we created two particular configurations of the electric field within the structure. The first one permits their isolation whereas the second one creates a net force which repels the particles from the microwell entrance. To increase the parallelism at which the cell-isolation function is implemented, a new technique based on coplanar electrodes to detect particle presence was implemented. A lock-in amplifying scheme was used to monitor the impedance of the channel perturbed by flowing particles in high-conductivity suspension mediums. The impedance measurement module was also combined with the dielectrophoretic focusing stage situated upstream of the measurement stage, to limit the measured signal amplitude dispersion due to the particles position variation within the microchannel. In conclusion, the designed system complies with the initial specifications making it suitable for cellomics and biotechnology applications.
author2 Franchi Scarselli, Eleonora
author_facet Franchi Scarselli, Eleonora
Duqi, Enri
author Duqi, Enri
author_sort Duqi, Enri
title Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays
title_short Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays
title_full Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays
title_fullStr Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays
title_full_unstemmed Continuos Flow Single Cell Separation into Open Microwell Arrays
title_sort continuos flow single cell separation into open microwell arrays
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2012
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/4778/
work_keys_str_mv AT duqienri continuosflowsinglecellseparationintoopenmicrowellarrays
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