High-throughput sorting of nanoliter droplets enabled by a sequentially addressable dielectrophoretic array.

2021 
Droplet microfluidics has emerged as a powerful tool for a diverse range of biomedical and industrial applications such as single-cell analysis, directed evolution, and metabolic engineering. In these applications, droplet sorting has been effective for isolating small droplets encapsulating molecules, cells, or crystals of interest. Recently, there is an increased interest in extending the applicability of droplet sorting to larger droplets to utilize their size advantage. However, sorting throughputs of large droplets have been limited, hampering their wide adoption. Here, we report our demonstration of high-throughput fluorescence-activated droplet sorting (FADS) of 1 nL droplets using an upgraded version of the sequentially addressable dielectrophoretic array (SADA), which we reported previously. The SADA is an array of electrodes that are individually and sequentially activated/deactivated according to the speed and position of a droplet passing nearby the array. We upgraded the SADA by increasing the number of driving electrodes constituting the SADA and incorporating a slanted microchannel. By using a 10-electrode SADA with the slanted microchannel, we achieved FADS of 1 nL droplets at a record high throughput of 1752 droplets/sec, twice as high as the previously reported maximum sorting throughput of 1 nL droplets. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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