Helping Lab-On-A-Chip Devices To ‘Swallow’ With Electro-Osmosis

Mimicking how muscles push food down the esophagus allows microdevices to move fluids; adding an electric field helps to further control this motion.

AsianScientist (May 18, 2016) – If you’ve ever found yourself in a situation where you have to eat upside down, you can thank the successive wave-like motions of peristalsis for keeping the chewed food down and ferrying it into your stomach. In mechanical microdevices, this method of transport moves fluids without a separate pump—saving precious space in lab-on-a-chip and futuristic organ-on-a-chip devices. However, this transport method is difficult to finely control.

To remedy this, researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology’s Advanced Technology Development Center in Kharagpur, West Bengal have conducted lubrication theory-based analyses to explore the hydrodynamic effects of improving flow rate in pre-existing peristaltic hardware relying on an external electric field. Their research was published in Physics of Fluids.

The present study assesses the combined effects of electric fields and peristalsis on the channel flow rate.

“Through our theoretical analysis, we’ve shown that by keeping the same peristalsis hardware, we may obtain an enhanced on-the-fly controllability of the flow rate by augmenting the device with electric fields,” said Professor Suman Charkraborty from the Mechanical Engineering Department, who is also the head of the School of Medical Science and Technology.

According to Chakraborty, an electric field component can easily be implemented because existing microtubule fabrication often involves sputtering electrodes onto the ends of the tubes. When a field is switched on, these electrodes cause fluid flow by attracting charged fluid toward the compatible electrode.

This has the potential to aid researchers in studying targeted drug delivery; augmenting biophysical fluid transport in human bodies; and observing and controlling chemical reactions and mixing in surface-modulated fluid flow environments.

Future work for Chakraborty and his colleagues includes analyzing the motion of charged particles in the electro-osmotically-modulated peristaltic environment—a tricky matter, due to the interactions between fluidic drag, fluid flow via the electric field, and electrophoretic particle motion.

The researchers are also working to develop nanoscale energy harvesting, microfluidics-based portable kits for rapid medical diagnostics, and microfluidic tools to deepen our understanding of the physiological dynamics of living systems.


The article can be found at: Bandopadhyay et al. (2016) Electroosmosis-modulated Peristaltic Transport in Microfluidic Channels.

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Source: American Institute of Physics; Photo: Shutterstock.
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