Digital acoustofluidics enables contactless and programmable liquid handling

Steven Peiran Zhang(Duke University), James P. Lata(Pennsylvania State University), Chuyi Chen(Duke University), John Mai(University of Southern California), Feng Guo(Pennsylvania State University), Zhenhua Tian(Duke University), Liqiang Ren(Pennsylvania State University), Zhangming Mao(Pennsylvania State University), Po‐Hsun Huang(Duke University), Peng Li(Pennsylvania State University), Shujie Yang(Duke University), Tony Jun Huang(Duke University)
Nature Communications
July 20, 2018
Cited by 202Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract For decades, scientists have pursued the goal of performing automated reactions in a compact fluid processor with minimal human intervention. Most advanced fluidic handling technologies (e.g., microfluidic chips and micro-well plates) lack fluid rewritability, and the associated benefits of multi-path routing and re-programmability, due to surface-adsorption-induced contamination on contacting structures. This limits their processing speed and the complexity of reaction test matrices. We present a contactless droplet transport and processing technique called digital acoustofluidics which dynamically manipulates droplets with volumes from 1 nL to 100 µL along any planar axis via acoustic-streaming-induced hydrodynamic traps, all in a contamination-free (lower than 10 −10 % diffusion into the fluorinated carrier oil layer) and biocompatible (99.2% cell viability) manner. Hence, digital acoustofluidics can execute reactions on overlapping, non-contaminated, fluidic paths and can scale to perform massive interaction matrices within a single device.


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