Chemically generated convective transport in microfluidic system

POSTER

Abstract

High precision manipulation of small volumes of fluid, containing suspended micron sized objects like cells, viruses, and large molecules, is one of the main goals in designing modern lab-on-a-chip devices which can find a variety of chemical and biological applications. To transport the cargo toward sensing elements, typical microfluidic devices often use pressure driven flows. Here, we propose to use enzymatic chemical reactions which decompose reagent into less dense products and generate flows that can transport particles. Density variations that lead to flow in the assigned direction are created between the place where reagent is fed into the solution and the location where it is decomposed by enzymes attached to the surface of the microchannel. When the reagent is depleted, the fluid motion stops and particles sediment to the bottom. We demonstrate how the choice of chemicals, leading to specific reaction rates, can affect the transport properties. In particular, we show that the intensity of the fluid flow, the final location of cargo, and the time for cargo delivery are controlled by the amount and type of reagent in the system.

Authors

  • Oleg Shklyaev

    Department of Chemical Engineering, The University of Pittsburgh

  • Sambeeta Das

    Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University

  • Alicia Altemose

    Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University

  • Henry Shum

    University of Pittsburgh, Department of Chemical Engineering, The University of Pittsburgh

  • Anna Balazs

    Univ of Pittsburgh, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Pittsburgh, Chemical Engineering Department, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261, USA, Department of Chemical Engineering, The University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Chemical Engineering Department, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA

  • Ayusman Sen

    Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University