posted on 2018-03-12, 00:00authored byVictor
H. Perez-Gonzalez, Roberto C. Gallo-Villanueva, Braulio Cardenas-Benitez, Sergio O. Martinez-Chapa, Blanca H. Lapizco-Encinas
Insulator-based dielectrophoresis
(iDEP) is a microfluidic technique
used for particle analysis in a wide array of applications. Significant
efforts are dedicated to improve iDEP systems by reducing voltage
requirements. This study assesses how the performance of an iDEP system,
in terms of particle trapping, depends on the number of insulating
obstacles longitudinally present in the microchannel. In analogy with
Kirchhoff’s loop rule, iDEP systems were analyzed as a series
combination of electrical resistances, where the equivalent resistance
of the post array is composed by a number of individual resistors
(columns of insulating posts). It was predicted by the COMSOL model,
and later confirmed by experimental results, that reducing the number
of columns of insulating posts significantly affects the electric
field distribution, decreasing the required voltage to dielectrophoretically
trap particles within the post array. As an application, it was demonstrated
that decreasing the number of columns in the post array allows for
the dielectrophoretic trapping of nanometer-scale particles at voltages
well below those reported in previous similar iDEP systems. These
findings illustrate how the iDEP channel configuration can be customized
for specific applications.