Self-Coalescing Flows: A Powerful Method For Integrating Biochemical Reactions In Portable Diagnostic Devices
Emmanuel Delamarche, Manager, Precision Diagnostics, IBM Research GmbH
Diagnostics are ubiquitous in healthcare because they support
prevention, monitoring, and treatment of diseases. Specifically,
point-of-care diagnostics (POCDs) are particularly attractive for
identifying diseases near patients, quickly, and in many settings and
scenarios. POCDs can also trace exposure and acquired immunity of
populations exposed to infectious diseases and screen metabolic
deficiencies of individuals, who may be exposed to severe drug side
effects. However, a long-standing challenge with POCDs is the need to
integrate reagents in closed devices for a large number of potential
applications. Following our previous contributions on developing
capillary-driven microfluidic chips for highly miniaturized
immunoassays, controlling and monitoring flow with nanoliter precision,
and securing diagnostics against counterfeiting with dynamic optical
security codes, we recently demonstrated how to shape and fold liquids
inside microfluidic chambers to dissolve reagents with extreme
precision. In this presentation, I will explain the underlying concept
of this method, called self-coalescing flows, and will illustrate how it
can be used to perform various assays, ranging from enzymatic assays,
to immunoassays and molecular assays. Despite self-coalescing flows
being still an open research topic in fluid physics, their
implementation is surprisingly facile and robust and therefore may
benefit the entire community working on POCDs.
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