학술논문

Coupling evaporation-based, microfluidic concentration and confocal fluorescence spectroscopy
Document Type
Conference
Source
2008 IEEE 21st International Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems Micro Electro Mechanical Systems, 2008. MEMS 2008. IEEE 21st International Conference on. :200-203 Jan, 2008
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Microfluidics
Fluorescence
Spectroscopy
Valves
Pumps
Ultrafast optics
Biomedical optical imaging
Optical pumping
Optical sensors
Probes
Language
ISSN
1084-6999
Abstract
Detection limits in confocal fluorescence spectroscopy (CFS) have traditionally been restrained by the low molecular detection efficiencies associated with femtoliter probe volumes. In this report, we address this issue by designing a microfluidic evaporator capable of accepting large sample volumes and concentrating biomolecules to a nanoliter-sized, interrogation chamber. Single molecule fluorescence detection within this chamber is enhanced through microfluidic recirculation, enabling single molecule analysis comparable to traditional capillary-based platforms. Proof of concept is demonstrated using a 10X sample concentrator upstream to a 5 nanoliter CFS detection chamber and recording the subsequent increase in single molecule fluorescent bursts. This marriage of active microfluidics and sample processing, and CFS technology offers a novel means of overcoming the limits of single molecule detection in solution.