Title :
Using feedback control of microflows to independently steer multiple particles
Author :
Armani, Michael D. ; Chaudhary, Satej V. ; Probst, Roland ; Shapiro, Benjamin
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Aerosp. Eng., Maryland Univ., College Park, MD
Abstract :
In this paper, we show how to combine microfluidics and feedback control to independently steer multiple particles with micrometer accuracy in two spatial dimensions. The particles are steered by creating a fluid flow that carries all the particles from where they are to where they should be at each time step. Our control loop comprises sensing, computation, and actuation to steer particles along user-input trajectories. Particle locations are identified in real-time by an optical system and transferred to a control algorithm that then determines the electrode voltages necessary to create a flow field to carry all the particles to their next desired locations. The process repeats at the next time instant. Our method achieves inexpensive steering of particles by using conventional electroosmotic actuation in microfluidic channels. This type of particle steering does not require optical traps and can noninvasively steer neutral or charged particles and objects that cannot be captured by laser tweezers. (Laser tweezers cannot steer reflective particles, or particles where the index of refraction is lower than (or for more sophisticated optical vortex holographic tweezers does not differ substantially from) that of the surrounding medium.) We show proof-of-concept PDMS devices, having four and eight electrodes, with control algorithms that can steer one and three particles, respectively. In particular, we demonstrate experimentally that it is possible to use electroosmotic flow to accurately steer and trap multiple particles at once
Keywords :
electrophoresis; feedback; microchannel flow; osmosis; PDMS devices; electrode voltages; electroosmotic actuation; electroosmotic flow; fluid flow; microflow feedback control; microfluidic channels; microfluidics; optical system; particle steering; user-input trajectories; Feedback control; Fluid flow control; Holographic optical components; Holography; Microfluidics; Optical control; Optical feedback; Optical refraction; Optical sensors; Optical vortices; Electroosmotic actuation; electrophoretic; feedback control; microfluidics; particles; steering; trapping;
Journal_Title :
Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JMEMS.2006.878863