Issue 7, 2011

Droplet size based separation by deterministic lateral displacement—separating droplets by cell-induced shrinking

Abstract

We present a novel method for passive separation of microfluidic droplets by size at high throughput using deterministic lateral displacement (DLD). We also show that droplets containing Saccharomyces cerevisiae shrink significantly during incubation while droplets containing only yeast media retain or slightly increase their size. We demonstrate the DLD device by sorting out shrunken yeast-cell containing droplets from 31% larger diameter droplets which were generated at the same time containing only media, present at a >40-fold excess. This demonstrates the resolving power of droplet separation by DLD and establishes that droplets can be separated for a biological property of the droplet contents discriminated by a change of the physical properties of the droplet. Thus suggesting that this technique may be used for e.g. clonal selection. The same device also separates 11 µm from 30 µm droplets at a rate of 12 000 droplets per second, more than twofold faster than previously demonstrated passive hydrodynamic separation devices.

Graphical abstract: Droplet size based separation by deterministic lateral displacement—separating droplets by cell-induced shrinking

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Dec 2010
Accepted
25 Jan 2011
First published
14 Feb 2011

Lab Chip, 2011,11, 1305-1310

Droplet size based separation by deterministic lateral displacement—separating droplets by cell-induced shrinking

H. N. Joensson, M. Uhlén and H. A. Svahn, Lab Chip, 2011, 11, 1305 DOI: 10.1039/C0LC00688B

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