Droplet-in-Oil Microfluidics for the Lab-on-a-Disc Platform
Ho Pui Ho, Professor, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
We report the use of droplet-in-oil strategy in a lab-on-a-disc (LOAD) device
platform. In common lab-on-a-disc devices, movement of the aqueous sample inside
the microchannel is predominantly affected by surface tension coming from the
channel surface. Typically one would make the surface hydrophobic to ensure smooth
sample movement. In centrifugal microfluidic (i.e. lab-on-a-disc) devices, the control
of surface tension becomes critically important, as the operation of microfluidic
components such as the capillary burst valve and siphon valve rely solely on surface
tension effects. However, in practice, surface tension is fabrication and temperature
dependent, thus leading to large variations in device parameters. In addition, it is also
difficult to control the sample loading volume in the presence of surface tension.
The droplet-in-oil approach is an effective approach to address problems associated
with surface tension. By suspending the sample droplet in a carrier oil medium, one
can remove surface tension completely. Furthermore, by incorporating the droplet-inoil
approach in the lab-on-a-disc device platform, actuation force in the absence of
surface tension becomes much easier to control as it depends primarily on the
spinning speed and density difference. Centrifugal force acting on the droplets is also present everywhere within the disc surface, thereby completely removing the need of external pumping. Most importantly, movement of the droplets is completed driven
by inertial forces and therefore does not require any motion of the carrier fluid. The
mineral oil medium remains stationary throughout the course of the bioassay.
In this presentation, we report several microfluidic components we have developed
for droplet generation, performing stop-go actuation and merging droplets in order to
carry out typical sample processing steps as required by common bioassays. We also
demonstrate the use of our device for performing nucleic acid am
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