Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1039/C6LC01045H
Title: Advancements in microfluidics for nanoparticle separation
Authors: Salafi T.
Zeming K.K. 
Zhang Y. 
Keywords: DNA
nanoparticle
protein
nanoparticle
acoustophoresis
Article
cell actuation
centrifugation
colloid
deterministic lateral displacement
diffusion
electrohydrodynamic vortex
electrophoresis
electrostatic sieving
exosome
field flow fractionation
filtration
inertial microfluidics
ion concentration polarization
magnetophoresis
microfluidics
nonhuman
optics
priority journal
separation technique
ultracentrifugation
virus
chemistry
devices
lab on a chip
magnetic field
microfluidics
optical tweezers
procedures
Fractionation, Field Flow
Lab-On-A-Chip Devices
Magnetic Fields
Microfluidics
Nanoparticles
Optical Tweezers
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation: Salafi T., Zeming K.K., Zhang Y. (2017). Advancements in microfluidics for nanoparticle separation. Lab on a Chip 17 (1) : 11-33. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1039/C6LC01045H
Abstract: Nanoparticles have been widely implemented for healthcare and nanoscience industrial applications. Thus, efficient and effective nanoparticle separation methods are essential for advancement in these fields. However, current technologies for separation, such as ultracentrifugation, electrophoresis, filtration, chromatography, and selective precipitation, are not continuous and require multiple preparation steps and a minimum sample volume. Microfluidics has offered a relatively simple, low-cost, and continuous particle separation approach, and has been well-established for micron-sized particle sorting. Here, we review the recent advances in nanoparticle separation using microfluidic devices, focusing on its techniques, its advantages over conventional methods, and its potential applications, as well as foreseeable challenges in the separation of synthetic nanoparticles and biological molecules, especially DNA, proteins, viruses, and exosomes. © The Royal Society of Chemistry.
Source Title: Lab on a Chip
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/174239
ISSN: 14730197
DOI: 10.1039/C6LC01045H
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