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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
121

Multi-Board Digital Microfluidic Biochip Synthesis with Droplet Crossover Optimization

Gupta, Madhuri N. 11 July 2014 (has links)
No description available.
122

DEVELOPMENT OF POLYMER MEMS STRUCTURES FOR LAB-ON-A-CHIPS USING UV-LIGA AND INJECTION MOLDING TECHNIQUES

TRICHUR, RAMACHANDRAN KRISHNAN 04 September 2003 (has links)
No description available.
123

RAPID DETECTION OF PROSTATE SPECIFIC ANTIGEN (PSA) ON A POLYMER LAB-ON-A CHIP

THATI, SHILPA 06 October 2004 (has links)
No description available.
124

ON-CHIP PASSIVE FLUIDIC MICROMIXER AND PRESSURE GENERATOR FOR DISPOSABLE LAB-ON-A-CHIPS

HONG, CHIEN-CHONG January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
125

On-chip Blood Cell/Plasma Separators on Polymer Lab-on-a-Chip for Point-of-Care Clinical Diagnostics

Han, Jungyoup 02 October 2006 (has links)
No description available.
126

A SPIRALLY-ROLLED FLEXIBLE POLYMER TUBE INTEGRATED WITH MICROSENSORS AND MICROFLUIDIC DEVICES FOR MULTIFUNCTIONAL SMART MICROCATHETERS

LI, CHUNYAN January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
127

Novel Electrofluidic Display Devices Enabled by Fluid-Confining Laplace Barriers

Kreit, Eric B. 24 April 2012 (has links)
No description available.
128

MEMS PROTOTYPICAL SYSTEM INTEGRATION AND PACKAGING FOR A GENERIC MICROFLUIDIC SYSTEM

DHARMATILLEKE, SAMAN MANGALA 11 October 2001 (has links)
No description available.
129

Marker-Free Isolation and Enrichment of Rare Cell Types Including Tumor Initiating Cells through Contactless Dielectrophoresis

Shafiee, Hadi 09 December 2010 (has links)
Microfluidics has found numerous applications ranging from the life sciences industries for pharmaceuticals and biomedicine (drug design, delivery and detection, diagnostic devices) to industrial applications of combinational synthesis (such as rapid analysis and high throughput screening). Among all these, one of the intriguing exploitation of microfluidics or micro total analysis systems (µTAS) is the separation of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) from body fluids. Cancer cells spread from the initial site of a tumor by first invading the surrounding tissue, then by entering the blood or lymph vessels, and finally by crossing the vessel wall to exit the vasculature into distal organs. The September 2006 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute (NCI) states: "The war on cancer was declared 40 years ago and cancer is still here," and "Technologies that capture enemy CTCs for further interrogation might prove useful in the war on cancer." CTCs cannot only become a new marker for cancer prognosis, but their detection can also be a valid new parameter for diagnosing cancer early, for monitoring disease progression and relapse, and for optimizing therapy. This research established a new method to manipulate rare cell types based on their electrical signatures using dielectrophoresis (DEP) without having direct contact between the electrodes and the sample, known as contactless dielectrophoresis (cDEP). DEP is the motion of a particle in a suspending medium due to its polarization in the presence of a non-uniform electric field. cDEP relies upon reservoirs filled with highly conductive fluid to act as electrodes and provide the necessary electric field. These reservoirs are placed adjacent to the main microfluidic channel and are separated from the sample by a thin barrier of a dielectric material as is shown in Figure 1h. The application of a high-frequency electric field to the electrode reservoirs causes their capacitive coupling to the main channel and an electric field is induced across the sample fluid. Similar to traditional DEP, cDEP exploits the varying geometry of the electrodes to create spatial non-uniformities in the electric field. However, by utilizing reservoirs filled with a highly conductive solution, rather than a separate thin film array, the electrode structures employed by cDEP can be fabricated in the same step as the rest of the device; hence the process is conducive to mass production. We demonstrated the ability to isolate human leukemia cancer cells (THP-1) cells from a heterogeneous mixture of live and dead cells using cDEP with more than 99% selectivity and 95% removal efficiency. Through numerical and experimental investigations, new generation of cDEP devices have been designed and tested to detect and isolate THP-1 cells from spiked blood samples with high selectivity and cell capture efficiency. Our experimental observations, using prototype devices, indicate that breast cancer cell lines at their different stages (MCF-7, MCF-10, and MDA-MB231) have unique electrical. Furthermore, through collaborations at the Wake Forest Comprehensive Center, we demonstrated that prostate tumor initiating cells (TICs) exhibit unique electrical signatures and DEP responses and cDEP technology can be exploited to isolate and enrich TICs for further genetic pathways investigations. / Ph. D.
130

Lab on a chip rare cell isolation platform with dielectrophoretic smart sample focusing, automated whole cell tracking analysis script, and a bioinspired on-chip electroactive polymer micropump

Anders, Lisa Mae 18 July 2014 (has links)
Dielectrophoresis (DEP), an electrokinetic force, is the motion of a polarizable particle in a non-uniform electric field. Contactless DEP (cDEP) is a recently developed cell sorting and isolation technique that uses the DEP force by capacitavely coupling the electrodes across the channel. The cDEP platform sorts cells based on intrinsic biophysical properties, is inexpensive, maintains a sterile environment by using disposable chips, is a rapid process with minimal sample preparation, and allows for immediate downstream recovery. This platform is highly competitive compared to other cell sorting techniques and is one of the only platforms to sort cells based on phenotype, allowing for the isolation of unique cell populations not possible in other systems. The original purpose of this work was to determine differences in the bioelectrical fingerprint between several critical cancer types. Results demonstrate a difference between Tumor Initiating Cells, Multiple Drug Resistant Cells, and their bulk populations for experiments conducted on three prostate cancer cell lines and treated and untreated MOSE cells. However, three significant issues confounded these experiments and challenged the use of the cDEP platform. The purpose of this work then became the development of solutions to these barriers and presenting a more commercializable cDEP platform. An improved analysis script was first developed that performs whole cell detection and cell tracking with an accuracy of 93.5%. Second, a loading system for doing smart sample handling, specifically cell focusing, was developed using a new in-house system and validated. Experimental results validated the model and showed that cells were successfully focused into a tight band in the middle of the channel. Finally, a proof of concept for an on-chip micropump is presented and achieved 4.5% in-plane deformation. When bonded over a microchannel, fluid flow was induced and measured. These solutions present a stronger, more versatile cDEP platform and make for a more competitive commercial product. However, these solutions are not just limited to the cDEP platform and may be applicable to multitudes of other microfluidic devices and applications. / Master of Science

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