Scientists at Australia's Monash University (Leslie Y. Yeo,
Leslie.Yeo@eng.monash.edu.au) have developed a process for rapidly
and efficiently separating blood plasma at the microscopic level
without any moving parts, potentially allowing doctors to do blood
tests without sending samples to a laboratory. The new method uses
the same principle that causes tea leaves to accumulate at the
center of the bottom in a stirred teacup, a phenomenon first
explained by Einstein in the 1920s. The technique is described in
the latest issue of the new open-access journal Biomicrofluidics.
Separating blood plasma from red blood cells, proteins and other
microscopic particles is an essential step in many common medical
tests, including those for cholesterol levels, drugs in athletes,
blood types in donors and glucose levels in diabetics. Current
testing requires samples to be taken in a doctor's office and sent
off to a laboratory and analyzed with a large centrifuge, a process
that can take several days.
In the new method, a tiny amount of
blood enters a fluid chamber, and a needle tip is placed close to
the surface of the blood at an angle. A voltage is applied to the
needle, generating ions around its tip that repel the oppositely
charged ions close to it. This creates an airflow known as "ionic
wind" that sweeps across the surface of the blood, causing it to
circulate. The microscopic particles in the blood travel in a
downward spiral because of the needle’s angle relative to the
surface.
When the fluid begins to circulate, one might intuitively
expect the microscopic particles such as red blood cells would be
pulled to the outside wall of the chamber owing to centrifugal
force. But because of a phenomenon called the "tea leaf paradox,"
the particles are instead pulled inward near the bottom of the
chamber. Einstein proposed an explanation to this phenomenon in 1926
when he noticed that tea leaves collected at the center of the
bottom of a stirred teacup instead of being expelled outward.
The tiny chamber of blood, like the teacup, is a cylinder of liquid
that is rotated at the top while the base remains stationary. To
satisfy a zero-velocity condition at the base, an inward force near
the bottom of the liquid is generated, suppressing the centrifugal
force there. Thus the microscopic particles spiral inward toward the
bottom of the chamber like a miniature tornado, leaving a clear
layer of plasma above.
Yeo anticipates the technology could be incorporated into a chip
roughly the size of a credit card. He said the devices could be
produced cheaply with current manufacturing techniques -- about 50
cents per chip -- but could still be five to 10 years away from mass
production.
Arifin et al.,
Biomicrofluidics, January-March 2007
Contact Leslie Yeo
Monash University
Leslie.Yeo@eng.monash.edu.au