Abstract
This study presents a particle manipulation and separation technique based on dielectrophoresis principle by employing an array of isosceles triangular microelectrodes on the bottom plate and a continuous electrode on the top plate. These electrodes generate non-uniform electric fields transversely across the microchannel. The particles within the flowing fluid experience a dielectrophoretic force perpendicular to the fluid flow direction due to the non-uniform electric fields. The isosceles triangular microelectrodes were designed to continuously exert a small dielectrophoretic force on the particles. Particles experiencing a larger dielectrophoretic force would move further in the perpendicular direction to the fluid flow as they traveled past each microelectrode. Polystyrene microspheres were used as the model particles, with particles of ∅20 μm employed for studying the basic characteristics of this technique. Particle separation was subsequently demonstrated on ∅10 and ∅15 μm microspheres. Using an applied sinusoidal voltage of 20 Vpp and frequency of 1 MHz, a mean separation distance of 0.765 mm between them was achieved at a flow rate of 3 μl/min (~1 mm/s), an important consideration for high throughput separation capability in a micro-scale technology device. This unique isosceles triangular microelectrodes design allows heterogeneous particle populations to be separated into multiple streams in a single continuous operation.
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