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Integrated In-Plane Nanofluidic Devices for Resistive-Pulse Sensing

Tanner W. Young, Michael P. Kappler, Ethan D. Call, Quintin J. Brown, Stephen C. Jacobson

2024Annual Review of Analytical Chemistry17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Single-particle (or digital) measurements enhance sensitivity (10- to 100-fold improvement) and uncover heterogeneity within a population (one event in 100 to 10,000). Many biological systems are significantly influenced by rare or infrequent events, and determining what species is present, in what quantity, and the role of that species is critically important to unraveling many questions. To develop these measurement systems, resistive-pulse sensing is used as a label-free, single-particle detection technique and can be combined with a range of functional elements, e.g., mixers, reactors, filters, separators, and pores. Virtually, any two-dimensional layout of the micro- and nanofluidic conduits can be envisioned, designed, and fabricated in the plane of the device. Multiple nanopores in series lead to higher-precision measurements of particle size, shape, and charge, and reactions coupled directly with the particle-size measurements improve temporal response. Moreover, other detection techniques, e.g., fluorescence, are highly compatible with the in-plane format. These integrated in-plane nanofluidic devices expand the toolbox of what is possible with single-particle measurements.

Topics & Concepts

Resistive touchscreenNanotechnologyParticle (ecology)Event (particle physics)NanoporeMaterials sciencePlane (geometry)Sensitivity (control systems)Computer scienceOptoelectronicsElectronic engineeringPhysicsEngineeringQuantum mechanicsGeometryMathematicsOceanographyComputer visionGeologyNanopore and Nanochannel Transport StudiesElectrochemical Analysis and ApplicationsMicrofluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
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