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Non-equilibrium Inertial Separation Array for High-throughput, Large-volume Blood Fractionation

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2017

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Nature Publishing Group UK
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Mutlu, Baris R., Kyle C. Smith, Jon F. Edd, Priyanka Nadar, Mcolisi Dlamini, Ravi Kapur, and Mehmet Toner. 2017. “Non-equilibrium Inertial Separation Array for High-throughput, Large-volume Blood Fractionation.” Scientific Reports 7 (1): 9915. doi:10.1038/s41598-017-10295-0. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-10295-0.

Abstract

Microfluidic blood processing is used in a range of applications from cancer therapeutics to infectious disease diagnostics. As these applications are being translated to clinical use, processing larger volumes of blood in shorter timescales with high-reliability and robustness is becoming a pressing need. In this work, we report a scaled, label-free cell separation mechanism called non-equilibrium inertial separation array (NISA). The NISA mechanism consists of an array of islands that exert a passive inertial lift force on proximate cells, thus enabling gentler manipulation of the cells without the need of physical contact. As the cells follow their size-based, deterministic path to their equilibrium positions, a preset fraction of the flow is siphoned to separate the smaller cells from the main flow. The NISA device was used to fractionate 400 mL of whole blood in less than 3 hours, and produce an ultrapure buffy coat (96.6% white blood cell yield, 0.0059% red blood cell carryover) by processing whole blood at 3 mL/min, or ∼300 million cells/second. This device presents a feasible alternative for fractionating blood for transfusion, cellular therapy and blood-based diagnostics, and could significantly improve the sensitivity of rare cell isolation devices by increasing the processed whole blood volume.

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