Archive for August, 2016

Chlorophyll lasers

From space shuttles to military equipment, or even the kitchenware that we use on daily basis, lasers have found use in more places than we often realise. Interestingly, the solid-state lasers were believed to be a solution to an unknown problem after their invention in 1950s. In that time nobody—including their developer Charles Townes—noticed that the lasers were one of the game changer inventions in the world’s history. After tens of years, in 1964, the laser technology was awarded with a Nobel prize when its potential for diverse applications were realized.

So far we have only discussed solid-state lasers, but there is definitely capacity in the laser world to improve the performance and versatility with the help of little twists, such as optofluidic lasers. “Optofluidics” is a synergic combination of optical systems and microfluidics. In other words, optical systems are built or synthesized from liquids, aiming to serve as good as their solid-state equivalents. For example, two immiscible liquids form a smooth surface in their interface, leading to a laser cavity or an optical resonator with a very high Q-factor that allows for operating at low energy levels. This emerging field gains importance when considering most of the biochemical reactions that occur in aqueous environments. Optofluidic laser systems are flexible to change their optical properties by just replacing the liquid media; and with this twist, lasers have new application areas including diagnosis of genetic disorders at the cellular level and in vivo biosensing.

What is more exciting about the optofluidic lasers is that they can be biodegradable and easily tunable in microenvironments. Researchers in University of Michigan recently showed that one of the most abundant pigments on earth, chlorophylls, can maintain both biodegradability and tunability in optical systems owing to their fluorescence capabilities. Chlorophylls have a high Q-factor, dual-absorption bands in the visible spectrum, and a large shift between absorption and emission bands, suggesting that chlorophylls can be used as donors in fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) laser (Figure 1). In this study, chlorophyll a was isolated from spinach leaf and used as the gain medium and the donor to develop a novel optofluidic laser. Two lasing bands of chlorophyll a was investigated by both theoretical and experimental means. Concentration-dependent studies enabled more insight for the mechanism determining when, where, and why the laser emission band appears. This new technique seems to gain increasing attention for applications in in vivo and in vitro biosensing, solar lighting and energy harvesting.

This article, published on 12th May 2016, is included in the Lab on a Chip Recent HOT Articles themed collection.

To download the full article for free* click the link below:

Optofluidic chlorophyll lasers
Yu-Cheng Chen, Qiushu Chena, Xudong Fan
Lab Chip, 2016, 16, 2228-2235
DOI: 10.1039/C6LC00512H

About the Webwriter

Burcu Gumuscu is a PhD researcher in BIOS Lab on a Chip Group at University of Twente in The Netherlands. Her research interests include development of microfluidic devices for second generation sequencing, organ-on-chip development, and desalination of water on the micron-scale.

*Access is free until 23/09/2016 through a registered RSC account.

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Pioneers of Miniaturization Lectureship 2016

We are delighted to announce that Dr. Daniel Irimia is the winner of the 2016 “Pioneers of Miniaturization” Lectureship.

The 11th “Pioneers of Miniaturization” Lectureship, sponsored by Lab on a Chip and Corning Incorporated, and supported by the Chemical and Biological Microsystems Society (CBMS), is for early to mid-career scientists who have made extraordinary or outstanding contributions to the understanding or development of miniaturised systems.

This “Pioneers of Miniaturization” Lectureship will be presented to Daniel at the µTAS 2016 Conference in Dublin, Ireland, 9-13 October 2016. Daniel will receive a certificate, a monetary award and will give a short lecture during the conference.

Many congratulations to Dr. Daniel Irimia on this achievement from the Lab on a Chip team

About the winner

Dr. Daniel Irimia is a bioengineer trained as a physician and passionate about understanding the clinical consequences of neutrophil activities during disease. He received his Ph.D. in bioengineering from the University of Illinois, Chicago in 2002 before becoming a Research Fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Daniel is currently an Associate Professor in Surgery and Bioengineering and Deputy Director of the BioMEMS Resource Center at the Center for Engineering in Medicine, USA. His research is focused on designing sophisticated tools to measure relevant neutrophil behavior with the highest precision. He leads a team of scientists and doctors that employ microfluidic devices and novel measurements of neutrophil functions to monitor burn patients, optimize treatments, and uncover neutrophil-targeting interventions that could prevent infections and sepsis in burn patients.

As the organizer of the Cell World Races, aimed at encouraging scientists and clinician-researchers to utilize microfluidic tools in their research for higher level of precision and detail, Daniel increases the awareness for the technological changes taking place in the field of cell motility. This has been featured on the front page of Wall Street Journal (March 2014) and in 2012 Daniel was one of the winners of the Wellcome Image Awards for the depiction of “Cancer cells in motion.”

For more details on Dr. Daniel Irimia’s research please visit his homepage.

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New YouTube Videos

On-demand droplet splitting using surface acoustic waves

A microfluidic cell-trapping device for single-cell tracking of host–microbe interactions

The physical origins of transit time measurements for rapid, single cell mechanotyping

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New YouTube Videos

Time-lapse lens-free imaging of cell migration in diverse physical microenvironments

On-Chip Micromagnet Frictionometer Based on Magnetically Driven Colloids for Nano-Bio Interface

Real-time assessment of nanoparticle-mediated antigen delivery and cell response

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