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1.
Anal Methods ; 16(30): 5335-5344, 2024 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39034856

ABSTRACT

Recently, exosomes have emerged as important biomarkers for cancer diagnosis, playing a significant role in disease diagnosis. Consequently, efficient isolation of exosomes from complex body fluids is now a critical focus in clinical research. We have designed and fabricated an exosome separation chip, leveraging the synergies of flow and electric fields through 3D printing technology. This approach harnesses the combined strengths of both fields, substantially enhancing separation efficiency and purity. This also effectively reduced the voltage required to form an electric field (from 120 V down to 10 V), minimizing the risk of Joule heating, thereby preserving the structural integrity and biological activity of the exosomes. Compared with the standard exosome separation method of ultracentrifugation (UC), our chip offers numerous benefits: it is cost-effective (under 50 RMB), boasts a high recovery rate (64.8%) and high purity (almost 100%), achieves remarkable separation efficiency (within 30 minutes), and is straightforward to operate. Moreover, since an unmarked separation method is used, the separated exosomes can be directly used for downstream detection and analysis, which has certain practicality for future clinical research and application.


Subject(s)
Exosomes , Exosomes/chemistry , Humans , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques/instrumentation , Microfluidic Analytical Techniques/methods , Lab-On-A-Chip Devices , Electricity , Equipment Design , Ultracentrifugation/methods
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(22): e2402135121, 2024 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38771869

ABSTRACT

Seamless integration of microstructures and circuits on three-dimensional (3D) complex surfaces is of significance and is catalyzing the emergence of many innovative 3D curvy electronic devices. However, patterning fine features on arbitrary 3D targets remains challenging. Here, we propose a facile charge-driven electrohydrodynamic 3D microprinting technique that allows micron- and even submicron-scale patterning of functional inks on a couple of 3D-shaped dielectrics via an atmospheric-pressure cold plasma jet. Relying on the transient charging of exposed sites arising from the weakly ionized gas jet, the specified charge is programmably deposited onto the surface as a virtual electrode with spatial and time spans of ~mm in diameter and ~µs in duration to generate a localized electric field accordantly. Therefore, inks with a wide range of viscosities can be directly drawn out from micro-orifices and deposited on both two-dimensional (2D) planar and 3D curved surfaces with a curvature radius down to ~1 mm and even on the inner wall of narrow cavities via localized electrostatic attraction, exhibiting a printing resolution of ~450 nm. In addition, several conformal electronic devices were successfully printed on 3D dielectric objects. Self-aligned 3D microprinting, with stacking layers up to 1400, is also achieved due to the electrified surfaces. This microplasma-induced printing technique exhibits great advantages such as ultrahigh resolution, excellent compatibility of inks and substrates, antigravity droplet dispersion, and omnidirectional printing on 3D freeform surfaces. It could provide a promising solution for intimately fabricating electronic devices on arbitrary 3D surfaces.

3.
Sci Bull (Beijing) ; 63(19): 1260-1266, 2018 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36658864

ABSTRACT

Premixed and partially premixed flames (PPFs) of H2/CO/air syngas are studied numerically to investigate the effect of pressure on syngas PPF structure. Chemical characteristics of the syngas flame at different pressures are investigated based on reaction limit analysis using a one-dimensional configuration. The results show that CO affects the syngas reaction limits through both physical effects that consist mainly in dilution and chemical effects that are related to both R23 (CO + OH = CO2 + H) and HCO pathway. In particular, the HCO pathway weakens the flame at low pressures due to the chain-terminating effect of R25 (HCO + O2 = CO + HO2) and R26 (HCO + H = CO + H2), and enhances the flame at high pressures because of the contribution of R25 to the HO2 chain-branching process. These CO chemical characteristics are also observed in the premixed zone of 50% H2 + 50% CO syngas PPFs whereas only R23 is important in the non-premixed zone.

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