RESUMO
Inertial microfluidics uses the intrinsic fluid inertia in confined channels to manipulate the particles and cells in a simple, high-throughput, and precise manner. Inertial focusing in a straight channel results in several equilibrium positions within the cross sections. Introducing channel curvature and adjusting the cross-sectional aspect ratio and shape can modify inertial focusing positions and can reduce the number of equilibrium positions. In this work, we introduce an innovative way to adjust the inertial focusing and reduce equilibrium positions by embedding asymmetrical obstacle microstructures. We demonstrated that asymmetrical concave obstacles could break the symmetry of original inertial focusing positions, resulting in unilateral focusing. In addition, we characterized the influence of obstacle size and 3 asymmetrical obstacle patterns on unilateral inertial focusing. Finally, we applied differential unilateral focusing on the separation of 10- and 15-µm particles and isolation of brain cancer cells (U87MG) from white blood cells (WBCs), respectively. The results indicated an excellent cancer cell recovery of 96.4% and WBC rejection ratio of 98.81%. After single processing, the purity of the cancer cells was dramatically enhanced from 1.01% to 90.13%, with an 89.24-fold enrichment. We believe that embedding asymmetric concave micro-obstacles is a new strategy to achieve unilateral inertial focusing and separation in curved channels.
RESUMO
Pretreatment of activated sludge is an important step in increasing the reaction speed during anaerobic digestion by accelerating the hydrolysis process. It is necessary not only to analyze the changes in the general properties of the sludge before and after pretreatment but also to further analyze and evaluate the sludge structure and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS). In this study, the changes in coking sludge extracts after pretreatments with alkali, autoclaving, and Fe+ autoclaving were analyzed and compared using EPS heat extraction method. Moreover, the methane production potential of the pretreated coking sludge was investigated via biochemical methane potential (BMP) test. The results showed that after alkali, autoclaving, and Fe+ autoclaving, the concentration of protein and polysaccharide in the bound sludge extract accounted for approximately 40% and 28%, 62% and 51%, and 66% and 83% of the total protein and polysaccharide extracted from the sludge, respectively. In the experiment without pretreatment, there is no phenomenon of gas production from coking sludge. According to the BMP test results, Fe+ autoclaving pretreatment showed the highest methane production of 257 mL/gVSS. This study revealed that the analysis of sludge extracts was necessary in assessing the effects of anaerobic digestion pretreatment and methanogenic potential. Moreover, coking sludge showed higher methanogenic potential after Fe+ autoclaving pretreatment.