Droplet microfluidics has become an indispensable tool for biomedical research and lab-on-a-chip applications owing to its unprecedented throughput, precision, and cost-effectiveness. Although droplets can be generated and screened in a high-throughput manner, the inability to label the inordinate amounts of droplets hinders identifying the individual droplets after generation. Herein, we demonstrate an acoustofluidic platform that enables on-demand, real-time dispensing, and deterministic coding of droplets based on their volumes. By dynamically splitting the aqueous flow using an oil jet triggered by focused traveling surface acoustic waves, a sequence of droplets with deterministic volumes can be continuously dispensed at a throughput of 100 Hz. These sequences encode barcoding information through the combination of various droplet lengths. As a proof-of-concept, we encoded droplet sequences into end-to-end packages ( e.g. , a series of 50 droplets), which consisted of an address barcode with binary volumetric combinations and a sample package with consistent volumes for hosting analytes. This acoustofluidics-based, deterministic droplet coding technique enables the tagging of droplets with high capacity and high error-tolerance, and can potentially benefit various applications involving single cell phenotyping and multiplexed screening.
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A mass manufacturable thermoplastic based microfluidic droplet generator on cyclic olefin copolymer
The rapid progress of droplet microfluidics and its wide range of applications have created a high demand for the mass fabrication of low-cost, high throughput droplet generator chips aiding both biomedical research and commercial usage. Existing polymer or glass based droplet generators have failed to successfully meet this demand which generates the need for the development of an alternate prototyping technique. This work reports the design, fabrication and characterization of a mass manufacturable thermoplastic based microfluidic droplet generator on cyclic olefin copolymer (COC). COC chips with feature size as low as 20 µm have been efficiently fabricated using injection molding technology leading to a high production of inexpensive droplet generators. The novelty of this work lies in reoptimising surface treatment and solvent bonding methods to produce closed COC microchannels with sufficiently hydrophobic (contact angle of 120°) surfaces. These COC based droplet generators were shown to generate stable monodisperse droplets at a rate of 1300 droplets/second in the dripping regime. These new mass manufacturable, disposable and cheap COC droplet generators can be custom designed to cater to the rapidly increasing biomedical and clinical applications of droplet microfluidics.
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- PAR ID:
- 10127276
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of micromechanics and microengineering
- Volume:
- 29
- Issue:
- 5
- ISSN:
- 0960-1317
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 055009
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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