Microfluidic Printing: From Combinatorial Drug Screening to Artificial Cell Assaying
Tingrui Pan, Associate Professor, University Of California Davis
Microfluidic impact printing has been recently introduced, benefiting
from the nature of simple device architecture, low cost,
non-contamination, scalable multiplexability and high throughput. In
this talk, we will review this novel microfluidic-based droplet
generation platform, utilizing modular microfluidic cartridges and
expandable combinatorial printing capacity controlled by plug-and-play
multiplexed actuators. Such a customizable microfluidic printing system
allows for ultrafine control of the droplet volume from picoliters
(~10pL) to nanoliters (~100nL), a 10,000 fold variation. The high
flexibility of droplet manipulations can be simply achieved by
controlling the magnitude of actuation (e.g., driving voltage) and the
waveform shape of actuation pulses, in addition to nozzle size
restrictions. Detailed printing characterizations on these parameters
have been conducted consecutively. A multichannel impact printing system
has been prototyped and demonstrated to provide the functions of
single-droplet jetting and droplet multiplexing as well as concentration
gradient generation. Moreover, several enabling chemical and biological
assays have been implemented and validated on this highly automated and
flexible printing platform. In brief, the microfluidic impact printing
system could be of potential value to establishing multiplexed droplet
assays for high-throughput life science researchers.
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