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A low-cost, plug-and-play inertial microfluidic helical capillary device for high-throughput flow cytometry.

TLDR
With precise and consistent 3D focusing of microbeads and cells with a wide range of sizes at high throughput and without the use of sheath flows, this simple capillary-based inertial microfluidic device will create new opportunities for this technique to be widely adopted in the laboratory research.
Abstract
Glass capillary tubes have been widely used in microfluidics for generating microdroplets and microfibers. Here, we report on the application of glass capillary to inertial focusing of microparticles and cells for high-throughput flow cytometry. Our device uses a commercially available capillary tube with a square cross-section. Wrapping the tube into a helical shape induces the Dean vortices that aid focusing of cells or microbeads into a single position. We investigated the inertial focusing of microbeads in the device at various Re and concentrations and demonstrated 3D focusing with ∼100% efficiency for a wide range of microparticle diameters. We integrated the device with a laser counting system and demonstrated continuous counting of 10 μm microbeads with a high throughput of 13 000 beads/s as well as counting of fluorescently labeled white blood cells in the diluted whole blood. The helical capillary device offers a number of key advantages, including rapid and ultra-low-cost plug-and-play fabrication, optical transparency, and full compatibility with bright field or fluorescent imaging, easy re-configurability of the device radius for tuning focusing behavior, and ability to rotate for easy side-wall observation. With precise and consistent 3D focusing of microbeads and cells with a wide range of sizes at high throughput and without the use of sheath flows, we envision that this simple capillary-based inertial microfluidic device will create new opportunities for this technique to be widely adopted in the laboratory research.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Progress of Inertial Microfluidics in Principle and Application.

TL;DR: Owing to its special advantages in particle manipulation, inertial microfluidics will play a more important role in integrated biochips and biomolecule analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review and perspectives on microfluidic flow cytometers

TL;DR: This review describes some of the major advances made in the microfluidic cytometry field over the past ten years, focusing specifically on recent proposals for enhanced microfluids focusing techniques and detection/analysis methods, respectively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Channel innovations for inertial microfluidics

TL;DR: The purpose of this review is to provide guidance for the continued study of innovative channel designs to improve further the accuracy and throughput of inertial microfluidics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Label-free microfluidic sorting of microparticles.

TL;DR: An updated overview of the state of the art for passive label-free microparticle separation, with emphasis on performance and operational conditions is provided and the newly emerging approach based on shear-induced diffusion is highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Single stream inertial focusing in low aspect-ratio triangular microchannels

TL;DR: This work presents a new approach to single-stream inertial focusing based on a triangular microchannel geometry that offers a number of benefits, including simplicity of the fundamental principle and geometry, control of design, a small footprint, and ease of integration.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Monodisperse Double Emulsions Generated from a Microcapillary Device

TL;DR: It is shown that the droplet size can be quantitatively predicted from the flow profiles of the fluids, which makes this a flexible and promising technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fundamentals and applications of inertial microfluidics: a review

TL;DR: This review discusses the fundamental kinematics of particles in microchannels to familiarise readers with the mechanisms and underlying physics in inertial microfluidic systems and presents a comprehensive review of recent developments and key applications of inertialMicrofluidics systems according to their microchannel structures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inertial microfluidics for continuous particle separation in spiral microchannels

TL;DR: A spiral lab-on-a-chip (LOC) for size-dependent focusing of particles at distinct equilibrium positions across the microchannel cross-section from a multi-particle mixture is demonstrated for the first time.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous particle separation in spiral microchannels using dean flows and differential migration

TL;DR: A passive microfluidic device with spiral microchannel geometry for complete separation of particles that takes advantage of the dual role of Dean forces for focusing larger particles in a single equilibrium position and transposing the smaller particles from the inner half to the outer half of the microchannel cross-section.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inertial Focusing in Microfluidics

TL;DR: The theoretical developments that have made the field of inertial focusing what it is today are described and the key applications that will make inertialocusing a mainstream technology in the future are presented.
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