Stand-alone self-powered integrated microfluidic blood analysis system (SIMBAS)

Ivan K. Dimov(University of Valparaíso), Lourdes Basabe‐Desmonts(Dublin City University), José L. García-Cordero(Dublin City University), Benjamin M. Ross(University of California, Berkeley), Antonio J. Ricco(Dublin City University), Luke P. Lee(University of California, Berkeley)
Lab on a Chip
December 9, 2010
Cited by 340

Abstract

We present a self-powered integrated microfluidic blood analysis system (SIMBAS) that does not require any external connections, tethers, or tubing to deliver and analyze a raw whole-blood sample. SIMBAS only requires the user to place a 5 μL droplet of whole-blood at the inlet port of the device, whereupon the stand-alone SIMBAS performs on-chip removal of red and white cells, without external valving or pumping mechanisms, followed by analyte detection in platelet-containing plasma. Five complete biotin-streptavidin sample-to-answer assays are performed in 10 min; the limit of detection is 1.5 pM. Red and white blood cells are removed by trapping them in an integral trench structure. Simulations and experimental data show 99.9% to 100% blood cell retention in the passive structure. Powered by pre-evacuation of its PDMS substrate, SIMBAS' guiding design principle is the integration of the minimal number of components without sacrificing effectiveness in performing rapid complete bioassays, a critical step towards point-of-care molecular diagnostics.


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