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Journal ArticleDOI

Combined microfluidic-micromagnetic separation of living cells in continuous flow.

TLDR
A miniaturized, integrated, microfluidic device that can pull molecules and living cells bound to magnetic particles from one laminar flow path to another by applying a local magnetic field gradient, and thus selectively remove them from flowing biological fluids without any wash steps is described.
Abstract
This paper describes a miniaturized, integrated, microfluidic device that can pull molecules and living cells bound to magnetic particles from one laminar flow path to another by applying a local magnetic field gradient, and thus selectively remove them from flowing biological fluids without any wash steps. To accomplish this, a microfabricated high-gradient magnetic field concentrator (HGMC) was integrated at one side of a microfluidic channel with two inlets and outlets. When magnetic micro- or nano-particles were introduced into one flow path, they remained limited to that flow stream. In contrast, when the HGMC was magnetized, the magnetic beads were efficiently pulled from the initial flow path into the collection stream, thereby cleansing the original fluid. Using this microdevice, living E. coli bacteria bound to magnetic nanoparticles were efficiently removed from flowing solutions containing densities of red blood cells similar to that found in blood. Because this microdevice allows large numbers of beads and cells to be sorted simultaneously, has no capacity limit, and does not lose separation efficiency as particles are removed, it may be especially useful for separations from blood or other clinical samples. This on-chip HGMC-microfluidic separator technology may potentially allow cell separations to be carried out in the field outside of hospitals and clinical laboratories.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microfluidic cell sorting: a review of the advances in the separation of cells from debulking to rare cell isolation

TL;DR: This review examines the breadth of microfluidic cell sorting technologies, while focusing on those that offer the greatest potential for translation into clinical and industrial practice and that offer multiple, useful functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous flow separations in microfluidic devices

TL;DR: Researchers now have a diverse toolbox to choose from and it is likely that continuous flow methods will play an important role in future point-of-care or in-the-field analysis devices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microfluidic applications of magnetic particles for biological analysis and catalysis.

TL;DR: Keywords: Spin-Valve Sensors ; Cell Tracking Velocimetry ; On-A-Chip ; Polymerase-Chain-Reaction ; Total Analysis Systems ; Iron-Oxide Nanoparticles ; Field-Flow Fractionation ; Cross-Coupling Reactions ; Circulating Tumor-Cells ; Mode Magnetophoretic Microseparator Reference LMIS2-ARTICLE-2010-004
Journal ArticleDOI

In vivo magnetic enrichment and multiplex photoacoustic detection of circulating tumour cells

TL;DR: This approach allows circulating tumour cells to be concentrated from a large volume of blood in the vessels of tumour-bearing mice, and this could have potential for the early diagnosis of cancer and the prevention of metastasis in humans.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Poly(dimethylsiloxane) as a material for fabricating microfluidic devices.

TL;DR: This Account summarizes techniques for fabrication and applications in biomedicine of microfluidic devices fabricated in poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS).
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous Particle Separation Through Deterministic Lateral Displacement

TL;DR: A microfluidic particle-separation device that makes use of the asymmetric bifurcation of laminar flow around obstacles, which was better than the time and resolution of conventional flow techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI

A microfabricated fluorescence-activated cell sorter

TL;DR: A disposable microfabricated fluorescence-activated cell sorter (μFACS) for sorting various biological entities and it is shown that the bacteria are viable after extraction from the sorting device.
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