Team:ETH Zurich/Process/Microfluidics
From 2011.igem.org
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We came up with two different possible microfluidic channel designs, both involving a flow of toxic molecule in medium through the channel: | We came up with two different possible microfluidic channel designs, both involving a flow of toxic molecule in medium through the channel: | ||
- | * '''Variant 1: Plate with pixel filled with agarose and cell and a microfluidic channel above. ''' | + | * '''Variant 1: Plate with pixel filled with agarose and cell and a microfluidic channel above. '''This channel design consists of two parts: A PDMS plate with cubic "pixels" that is filled with cells in agarose by letting the liquid cell-agarose solution flow over the pixels by gravity. The agarose is then cooled down and the solidified surplus cell-agarose gel scraped off. A larger channel that is several pixels wide is then laid on top of the |
{|style="border: none;" align="center" | {|style="border: none;" align="center" | ||
|valign="top"|[[File:flowchannel_pixel.png|500px|center|thumb|'''Experimental setup for SmoColi.''' ]] | |valign="top"|[[File:flowchannel_pixel.png|500px|center|thumb|'''Experimental setup for SmoColi.''' ]] |
Revision as of 01:29, 22 September 2011
Microfluidics |
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We relatively early figured out that we need a some kind of channel to establish the acetaldehyde or xylene gradient needed for SmoColi (see Circuit Design). However, there were several different channel designs possible, and the final design evolved through an iterative series of design steps and design validations. The first designs were validated based on vast simulations, the final design furthermore by biological experiments in the lab (see Systems Validation). |
First Channel DesignsMicrofluidic channel with flow and recycling of the mediumWe came up with two different possible microfluidic channel designs, both involving a flow of toxic molecule in medium through the channel:
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Final Channel DesignMicrofluidic channel without flow
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