Archive for the ‘Chemistry World Highlights’ Category

Micro fuel cells for microchips

Micro fuel cells for microchips

Microfluidic devices have been hailed as the technology that will revolutionise areas such as diagnostics in medicine, food safety, drug development and genetic sequencing since their conception in the late 1980s. However, a limiting factor in translating neat microfluidic ideas to practical, portable devices has been integrating all the necessary components. The microfluidic chip may be small and perfectly formed, but the power source, pumps and control electronics for sample analysis are often external, bulky components – existing in the macroscale rather than the microscale.

Now, a team led by Neus Sabaté at the Institute of Microelectronics of Barcelona has integrated a micro direct methanol fuel cell into a microfluidic platform, which is capable of producing up to 4mW, sufficient to power the device. The carbon dioxide produced as a by-product of the fuel cell reaction is used to push liquids through the microchannels, removing the need for an external pump. The team has shown that by controlling the fuel cell operating conditions, they can control the flow rate of the liquid, which bears an almost linear relationship to the current generated in the device.

Jonathan Cooper, an expert in lab-on-a-chip technologies from the University of Glasgow, UK, comments: ‘A real strength of this work is the excellent job the researchers have done in integrating and packaging the device to show a working prototype. The flow rates are high enough for devices to function for several minutes and the device offers the prospect of enabling autonomous functionality on chip.’

The next step for Sabaté is to show that the device can truly function independently. ‘We are trying to prove that we can indeed perform measurements on analytes by integrating a low power electronic chip module and amperometric sensors,’ she says.  Her team is also working on higher degrees of device integration by fabricating them from just one type of polymer and experimenting with different fuels such as glucose.

Fuel cell-powered microfluidic platform for lab-on-a-chip applications
Juan Pablo Esquivel, Marc Castellarnau, Tobias Senn, Bernd Löchel, Josep Samitier and Neus Sabaté
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20426B

Read the original article in Chemistry World

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Bubble trouble eliminated in cancer treatment

Fixed channels direct the liquid perfluoropentane through a 7um wide orifice so that all of the droplets are the desired size for treatment

US scientists have developed a microfluidic device to manufacture droplets of a specific size at high speed for a cancer treatment called embolisation.

Embolisation involves blocking a blood vessel to restrict blood flow to a tumour. Gas embolotherapy is one such treatment, in which liquid droplets are introduced into a blood vessel and ultrasound is used to vibrate the droplets to produce enough heat to vaporise them. The liquid to gas phase change results in bubbles five to six times larger than the initial droplet, which can then block the blood vessel. Current methods to generate the droplets result in droplets of different sizes, forcing the therapies to require a higher activation power by ultrasound.

Now, droplets of a uniform size have been made by Abraham Lee at the University of California, Irvine, and co-workers. They have developed a microfluidic device to generate liquid perfluoropentane (PFP) droplets at high speed and in single file. The device is made of polydimethylsiloxane on a glass substrate and consists of fixed geometric channels designed to direct the liquid PFP through a 7µm wide orifice. The droplets were generated at a rate exceeding 100,000 droplets per second, were stable for weeks at room temperature and exhibited the desired size range for use in gas embolotherapy.

Joseph Bull, an expert in gas embolotherapy at the University of Michigan, US, states that this study has made a number of significant contributions to the field ‘including achieving a high production rate of lipid-encapsulated droplets and characterising the dynamics of droplet formation by high speed imaging’.

In the future, Lee plans to build a drug layer into the liquid PFP droplets to generate phase-change droplets for gas chemoembolotherapy. ‘Delivering a chemotherapeutic agent alongside our occlusive droplets should elevate local concentrations of the drug while minimising escape to the systemic circulation,’ he says. ‘We also plan to continue to push the limits in terms of rate and size of emulsion generation using droplet-based microfluidics,’ he adds.

High-speed, clinical-scale microfluidic generation of stable phase-change droplets for gas embolotherapy
David Bardin, Thomas D. Martz, Paul S. Sheeran, Roger Shih, Paul A. Dayton and Abraham P. Lee, Lab Chip, 2011
DOI: 10.1039/c1lc20615j

Article originally published in Chemistry World.

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Corn microchips

Left: macro images of zein-glass and zein-zein microfluidic devices. The inset shows a colourant-filled zein-glass microfluidic device with tubings. Right: serpentine channels for mixing two different chemical fluids

Gang Logan Liu and colleagues at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, have demonstrated that by using lithography and solvent or vapour deposition bonding, thin films of zein (a protein extracted from corn by-products) can be used to construct microfluidic channels, grids and wells as a green alternative to the plastic materials currently in use.

The group tested their zein microfluidic devices using several types of fluid, including fluorescent dyes and solutions of microbeads. They found that the devices did not leak and the channels could easily be viewed through a microscope. They also extended their work to produce a concentration gradient generator, mixing dye and solvent within serpentine channels to create several different concentration mixtures.

Liu anticipates being able to use the simple bonding of the zein films to make multilayer microfluidic devices in the future.

Interested? Read Tamsin Phillips’ full Chemistry World article here or download the Lab on a Chip paper:

Green microfluidic devices made of corn proteins
Jarupat Luecha, Austin Hsiao, Serena Brodsky, Gang Logan Liu and Jozef L. Kokini
Lab Chip, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20726A

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Making nerve pathways in chips for brain studies

The study of brain development and degeneration is hindered by a lack of physiologically realistic models. French scientists have now developed a way to reconstruct neuronal networks in a microfluidic system to more closely mimic the directional neuronal pathways found in the brain.

Current experimental brain models include neuronal cell cultures and whole animal models; however, the former lack the complex architecture found in vivo, and the latter restrict studies at the cellular level. Aiming to bridge the gap between these models, Jean-Louis Viovy of the Curie Institute, Paris, and coworkers have developed a microfluidic device that allows for the growth of oriented and functional synaptic connections in vitro.

The device consists of two cell culture chambers connected by microchannels, through which axons – nerve fibres that conduct impulses away from the body of the nerve cell – can penetrate to form neuronal networks. In previous setups, replication of the unidirectional networks found in vivo could not be achieved since axons were sent from each chamber to the one opposite, travelling in both directions across the microchannel.

Inspired by the observation that axons can be mechanically constrained, the team modified the device to include asymmetric, funnel-shaped microchannels, termed ‘axon diodes’, to allow axons to grow from only one chamber to the other and not the opposite way. The concept was verified by experiments with mouse cortical neurons, in which the axon projection was 97 per cent selective for the ‘correct’ direction.

Neuronal networks have been grown in microfluidic chambers to replicate neural pathways in the brain

Next, by seeding cortical neurons (from the outer part of the brain) on the emitting side of the device and striatal neurons (from the inner part of the brain) on the receiving side, the team demonstrated the reconstruction of an active neuronal pathway involving two different neuronal subtypes. Furthermore, these networks were routinely maintained for three weeks in vitro, which would allow for both short and long-term experimentation.

‘I was struck by the simplicity of the system, it is beautiful,’ remarks Bonnie Firestein, an expert in cellular neurobiology from Rutgers University, New Jersey, US. ‘It is very easy to make and to use, and allows the recreation of what happens in vivo in an in vitro system.’

Such a device has many potential applications in neurobiological research. An initial motivation for this work was the requirement of a model to study the progression of neuronal damage in degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s. Additionally, Viovy believes the system is also an important platform for research into brain development and cognitive science. ‘How neurons communicate regarding information transmission is also an area in which we currently lack a model of the kind we have proposed here,’ he says. The team are currently working on further increasing the complexity of the networks, to more accurately model the neuronal organisation of the brain.

Interested? Read Sarah Farley’s full Chemistry World article here or download the Lab on a Chip paper:

Axon diodes for the reconstruction of oriented neuronal networks in microfluidic chambers
Jean-Michel Peyrin, Bérangère Deleglise, Laure Saias, Maéva Vignes, Paul Gougis, Sebastien Magnifico, Sandrine Betuing, Mathéa Pietri, Jocelyne Caboche, Peter Vanhoutte, Jean-Louis Viovy and Bernard Brugg
Lab Chip, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/c1lc20014c

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No more oxygen for artificial lung

US scientists have mimicked the structure of a lung to make a device that can use air as a ventilating gas instead of pure oxygen. The invention could mean that oxygen cylinders to accompany artificial lung devices for lung disease patients are a thing of the past and implantable devices could be a step closer.

Joseph Potkay from Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Centre and co-workers fashioned microfluidic channels from the polymer polydimethylsiloxane and made them branch into smaller channels and then into artificial capillaries, similar to the arteries and capillaries in a real lung.  The oxygen exchange efficiency is three to five times better than current artificial lung devices owing to the small, micron-scale, blood and air channels.

The artificial lung device consists of small microfluidic channels, similar in size to blood vessels in real lungs, with a membrane for oxygen and carbon dioxide exchange

At the moment, lung disease patients in need of respiratory support rely on mechanical ventilators in which blood from the patient is circulated through a machine to oxygenate it. As Jeffrey Borenstein, an expert in microsystems technology and biomedical devices at the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, US, points out: ‘Current technology involves complex systems that are limited to intensive care units, so Potkay’s device has the potential to provide clinically relevant oxygenation levels using ambient air, opening the door to portable systems.’

The team aims to improve their device’s blood compatibility and scale it up so it can deliver enough oxygen to be suitable for humans.

Interested? Read Holly Sheahan‘s full Chemistry World article here or download the Lab on a Chip paper:

Bio-inspired, efficient, artificial lung employing air as the ventilating gas
Joseph A. Potkay, Michael Magnetta, Abigail Vinson and Brian Cmolik
Lab Chip, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20020H

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One in the eye for diabetes

Another LOC article has been highlighted in Chemistry World!  This article from Mu Chiao and colleagues describes the fabrication of a device that could be implanted behind the eye to release drugs on demand to treat retinal damage caused by diabetes.

Diabetic retinopathy can lead to blindness. A current treatment is laser therapy, which is destructive and results in side effects, such as diminished side and night vision, and unwanted laser burns. Another therapy is to administer antiproliferative drugs, such as docetaxel (normally a cancer drug), but the compounds clear from the blood quickly, so high doses are needed to produce the desired effect, which increases toxicity to other tissues.

Mu Chiao and colleagues from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver have made a device to be implanted behind the eye that releases drugs when triggered by an external magnet. This means that the device doesn’t need a battery and lower doses can be used. Implantable devices have been made before but drug release is done by diffusion and the release rates can’t be controlled, which is a problem if the dosage rate needs to be adjusted when a patient’s condition changes.

To find out more read Elinor Richard’s Chemistry World article or download the article itself here:

On-demand controlled release of docetaxel from a battery-less MEMS drug delivery device
Fatemeh Nazly Pirmoradi, John K. Jackson, Helen M. Burt and Mu Chiao
Lab Chip, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20134D

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Nanospray for nanodrugs

Over the last decade, the molecular complexity of drugs has increased significantly, leading to poor solubility, which means that the compounds can’t be used in the human body. To determine if new formulations have potential as successful drugs, solubility tests are run at an early stage of development. However, the amount of drug available for these tests is usually very small.

One way to get around this problem is by decreasing the compounds’ particle size. David Weitz from Harvard University, Cambridge, US, and colleagues, have done just that by developing a microfluidic device made from poly(dimethylsiloxane), incorporating two flow-focussing streams and a third for compressed air to form a spray, that can generate particle sizes below 100nm.

To find out more read Rebecca Brodie’s Chemistry World article or download the article itself here:

Early development drug formulation on a chip: Fabrication of nanoparticles using a microfluidic spray dryer
Julian Thiele, Maike Windbergs, Adam R. Abate, Martin Trebbin, Ho Cheung Shum, Stephan Förster and David A. Weitz
Lab Chip, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20298G

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Multiple emulsion droplet design

This paper featured in Chemistry World describes a device developed by scientists in China that can control the production of multiple emulsion systems. The system could be used to encapsulate incompatible drug ingredients and to design multi-compartment materials, they say.

Optical micrographs of monodisperse sextuple-component triple emulsions, containing one water-in-oil single emulsion and two oil-in-water-in-oil double emulsions

Multiple emulsions are liquid systems in which emulsion droplets are placed inside each other, each droplet smaller than the last, creating ‘levels’. Microfluidic devices have been designed to produce such systems, but controlling the number, size and ratio of droplets at each level is difficult, especially when developing a system that has different types of emulsion droplets at the same level. Control over such multi-compartment levels would allow more precise encapsulation and the development of more advanced materials.

Liang-Yin Chu at Sichuan University and colleagues have designed a microfluidic device capable of producing multi-compartment multiple emulsions. Chu says: ‘We hope the novel type of emulsions in our work will open a new gate for the applications of emulsions in the fields of template synthesis, synergistic delivery, micro reactions, bioassay and so on.’

For the full story read Harriet Brewerton’s Chemistry World article or download the paper here:

Controllable microfluidic production of multicomponent multiple emulsions
Wei Wang, Rui Xie, Xiao-Jie Ju, Tao Luo, Li Liu, David A. Weitz and Liang-Yin Chu
Lab Chip, 2011, 11, 1587-1592
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20065H

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Fish in chips: growing embryos in microfluidic systems

More than 100 embryos could be cultured in an area smaller than a credit card

The latest LOC article to be highlighted in Chemistry World is Michael Richardson‘s paper showing for the first time that an animal embryo can develop in a microfluidic environment. Their discovery could find application in high-throughput, low-cost assays for drug screening and life sciences research.

Zebrafish embryos are becoming important animal models, bridging the gap between cell culture assays and whole animal testing, and have found use in disease modelling and drug safety prediction assays. These assays are currently performed in microtitre plates and require periodic replacement of the buffer solution, which can cause stress or damage to the embryos. Now, Michael Richardson, from Leiden University, and coworkers have developed a microfluidic lab-on-a-chip device in which the buffer solution can flow continuously through the system, and have successfully raised zebrafish embryos under these conditions.

The team made the device from three layers of borosilicate glass with an array of temperature-controlled wells connected by channels; each well houses a single zebrafish embryo. The growth and development of embryos in the microchip was investigated following a five-day culture. Some minor phenotypic variations, such as reduced body length, were found in the microchip-raised embryos; however, there was no significant increase in other abnormalities compared with control experiments.

To find out more read Sarah Farley’s Chemisty World story here or download the paper:

Zebrafish embryo development in a microfluidic flow-through system
Eric M. Wielhouwer, Shaukat Ali, Abdulrahman Al-Afandi, Marko T. Blom, Marinus B. Olde Riekerink, Christian Poelma, Jerry Westerweel, Johannes Oonk, Elwin X. Vrouwe, Wilfred Buesink, Harald G. J. vanMil, Jonathan Chicken, Ronny van ‘t Oever and Michael K. Richardson
Lab Chip, 2011, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/C0LC00443J

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Microfluidics to diagnose sleeping sickness

Another Lab on a Chip article has been highlighted in Chemistry World!

Parasites (green) are separated from red blood cells in the device according to shape, not size

Human African trypanosomiasis, or sleeping sickness, is caused by parasites in the blood called trypanosomes. The disease is transmitted by tsetse flies and is fatal is left untreated. Standard diagnosis is done by looking for the parasites in blood samples using a microscope. However, the concentration of parasites is often very low, so they need to be separated from the red blood cells before analysis. Many separation methods have been developed, but they are expensive and too complex to use in remote areas where the disease is common.

Jonas Tegenfeldt from the University of Lund, and his colleagues, have developed a microfluidic device that separates the parasites from the blood cells using their shape, because parasites and red blood cells are very difficult to separate by size.

Read Amaya Camara-Campos’ full story online here or go straight to the LOC article:

Separation of parasites from human blood using deterministic lateral displacement
Stefan H. Holm, Jason P. Beech, Michael P. Barrett and Jonas O. Tegenfeldt
Lab Chip, 2011, 11, 1326
DOI: 10.1039/c0lc00560f

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