Issue 10, 2023

Sub-wavelength acoustic stencil for tailored micropatterning

Abstract

Acoustofluidic devices are ideal for biomedical micromanipulation applications, with high biocompatibility and the ability to generate force gradients down to the scale of cells. However, complex and designed patterning at the microscale remains challenging. In this work we report an acoustofluidic approach to direct particles and cells within a structured surface in arbitrary configurations. Wells, trenches and cavities are embedded in this surface. Combined with a half-wavelength acoustic field, together these form an ‘acoustic stencil’ where arbitrary cell and particle arrangements can be reversibly generated. Here a bulk-wavemode lithium niobate resonator generates multiplexed parallel patterning via a multilayer resonant geometry, where cell-scale resolution is accomplished via structured sub-wavelength microfeatures. Uniquely, this permits simultaneous manipulation in a unidirectional, device-spanning single-node field across scalable ∼cm2 areas in a microfluidic device. This approach is demonstrated via patterning of 5, 10 and 15 μm particles and 293-F cells in a variety of arrangements, where these activities are enabling for a range of cell studies and tissue engineering applications via the generation of highly complex and designed acoustic patterns at the microscale.

Graphical abstract: Sub-wavelength acoustic stencil for tailored micropatterning

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Jan 2023
Accepted
31 Mar 2023
First published
12 Apr 2023

Lab Chip, 2023,23, 2447-2457

Sub-wavelength acoustic stencil for tailored micropatterning

K. Kolesnik, P. Segeritz, D. J. Scott, V. Rajagopal and D. J. Collins, Lab Chip, 2023, 23, 2447 DOI: 10.1039/D3LC00043E

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