Paper
21 February 2020 Simulation and experimental results of a microfluidic dipole designed for brain experiments
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Abstract
This paper describes a proof of concept of a microfluidic dipole to sample cerebral fluid. It consists of a portable microfluidic probe which injects a buffer in one inlet and draws it from the other one after passing through a contact zone with the external liquid. Finite elements method modelling (FEM) shows a very stable liquid flow across the complete probing area. Furthermore, we determined that a design generating turbulence is likely to be more useful to capture brain molecules. Molecules displacement due to diffusion phenomena takes about 25 ms to diffuse over a 1 mm probe gap. Finally, our experiment showed that, to obtain a stable flow without turbulence the maximum inlet and outlet pressure is 0.05 mPa for the two tested configuration of dipole.
© (2020) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Nathaniel Brochu, Hamza Landari, Younes Messaddeq, and Amine Miled "Simulation and experimental results of a microfluidic dipole designed for brain experiments", Proc. SPIE 11235, Microfluidics, BioMEMS, and Medical Microsystems XVIII, 112350C (21 February 2020); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2547267
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KEYWORDS
Microfluidics

Brain

Liquids

Finite element methods

Actuators

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