1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a method for concentrating charged particles and an apparatus thereof, and particularly to a method and apparatus capable of trapping and concentrating co-ion micro-colloids and applicable to bead-based molecular assays.
2. Description of Related Art
Field-induced polarization of particles and molecules is responsible for a variety of electric particle and molecular forces that permit particle manipulation, drive colloid self-assembly, and allow suspension characterization. Conventional Maxwell-Wagner theories attribute these electric induced dipoles to interfacial dielectric polarization that occurs at atomic, molecular, and particle times and length scales, and exhibit megahertz or higher dispersion frequencies. In electrolytes, there is considerable evidence that double-layer conduction around the particle, normal charging into the double-layer of thickness λ, and other polarization mechanisms involving currents, ion fluxes, electro-osmotic convection, and charge storage in double-layers are the more dominant polarization mechanisms than dielectric polarization. These double-layer polarization mechanisms are confined to the thin double-layers (of 10-100 nm) but nevertheless involve space charges. Empirical evidence for such double-layer polarization mechanisms includes the prevalence of the relaxation time aλ/D in many impedance and dielectrophoresis measurements which requires a conducting Stern layer. However, these lumped conductivity models do not capture local charge accumulation (capacitance) effects at certain locations within the double-layer.
With these and other objects, advantages, and features of the invention that may become hereinafter apparent, the nature of the invention may be more clearly understood by reference to the detailed description of the present invention, the embodiments and to the several drawings herein.
The present invention provides a method and apparatus to concentrate charged particles by capturing local charge accumulation effects at a certain location within the double-layer on the surface of a conducting granule and the method and apparatus is able to apply to bead-based biomolecular assays.
The present invention discloses a method for concentrating charged particles, comprising the following steps. Firstly, a substrate comprising a reservoir may be provided and a conducting granule may be disposed in the reservoir. The conducting granule may be neither negatively charged or positively charged and comprise nano-pores or nano-channels permeable to ions. Then, a buffer solution may be disposed in the reservoir and the buffer solution comprises counter-ions having an opposite electric property to the conducting granule. Next, the charged particles may be added into the buffer solution. The charged particles may be co-ions having an identical electric property as the conducting granule. Finally, an external electric field mat be applied on the conducting granule, and thereon the counter-ions may exit from the nano-pores or nano-channels and produce a nonuniform concentration on a surface of the conducting granule such that a transient ion super-concentration phenomenon may occur at an ejecting pole on the conducting granule. The method may further comprise an electric double-layer formed on the surface of the conducting granule by the counter-ions. The pore size of the nano-pores may be roughly 3-5 times the double-layer thickness. In addition, the charged particles may comprise solute particles, such as fluorescent dye particles, or microparticles, such as micro-colloid particles. The method may be applicable to a bead-based biomolecular assay.
The present invention further discloses an apparatus for concentrating charged particles. The apparatus may comprise a substrate which may comprise a reservoir; a conducting granule which may be neither negatively charged or positively charged and comprise nano-pores or nano-channels able to permit ion permeation, and be disposed in the reservoir; a buffer solution which may comprise counter-ions having an opposite electric property to the conducting granule, and be disposed in the reservoir; and an external electric field which may applys on the conducting granule. Wherein, the charged particles may be co-ions having an identical electric property as the conducting granule and be added into the buffer solution. While the external electric field may be applied on the conducting granule, the counter-ions may exit from the nano-pores or nano-channels and have a nonuniform concentration on the surface of the conducting granule such that a transient ion super-concentration phenomenon may occur at an ejecting pole on the conducting granule. Additionally, the substrate may comprise a chip or a plastic plate amd the charged particles may comprise fluorescent dye particles or micro-colloid particles. The apparatus may be applicable to a bead-based biomolecular assay.
This present invention may involve a transient million-fold concentration of double-layer counter-ions at the ejecting pole of a mm-sized conducting nano-porous granule that permits ion permeation by applying a high-intensity electric field across the apparatus. This mechanism is also shown to trap and concentrate co-ion micro-colloids and hence has potential application in bead-based molecular assays.
The present invention also discloses the mechanism behind the transient ion super-concentration phenomenon at the ejecting pole and demonstrates that a six-order enhancement in the ion concentration may be achieved locally within the double-layer if the granule is permeable to ions, with a comparable enhancement of Maxwell-Wagner polarization. The dynamic super-concentration phenomenon may be attributed to a unique counter-ion screening dynamics that transforms half of the surface field into a converging one towards the ejecting pole. The resulting surface conduction flux may then funnel a large upstream electro-osmotic convective counter-ion flux into the injecting hemisphere towards the zero-dimensional gate of the ejecting hemisphere to produce the super concentration. When pore size of conducting granule may be roughly 3-5 times the buffer concentration-dependent double-layer thickness, the super concentration may happen.
In the present invention, the possibility of concentrating micro-colloids which are larger than the double-layer dimension is an intriguing possibility. The micro-colloids may be not expected to enter into the granule. However, co-ion micro-colloids can still be attracted to the concentrated counter-ions at the exit. Bead-based biomolecular assays have attracted considerable attention recently and the possibility of filtering and concentrating such functionalized or hybridized beads on a chip can be quite useful for such assays.
The exemplary embodiments of the present invention will be understood more fully from the detailed description given below and from the accompanying drawings of various embodiments of the invention, which, however, should not be taken to limit the invention to the specific embodiments, but are for explanation and understanding only.
Exemplary embodiments of the present invention are described herein in the context of a method and apparatus for concentrating charged particles.
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We image the enhanced counter-ion concentration not by, for example, counter-ions dye molecules, which may be too large to enter the nano-pores, but, for example, by fluorescent co-ion dye molecules which may neutralize the counter-ions at the exit of the granule and whose concentration is correspondingly enhanced at that location. An external electric field of about 100 V/cm may be applied on the mm-sized conducting granule made of polystyrene resins by a pair of electrodes. The pore size of the conducting granule may be 65 nm, or roughly 3-5 times the double-layer thickness of more concentrated buffer solutions (>0.1 mM). The granule can be either negatively charged (cation exchange) or positively charged (anion exchange). Fluorescence dye solution of cation (Rhodamine B) or anion (Fluorescein) in 10 mM pH buffers is filled in the reservoir prior to the field application. Net charges (mostly counter ions) released from the granule are immediately neutralized by co-ions (charged particles) in the bulk in a region close to the granule. Since co-ions as fluorescent dyes are employed to illuminate the phenomenon, an ejection reflects a local increase in the concentration in the neutral bulk close to the granule. The images are digitized and transferred into graphic analysis software, as shown in the
Sequential frames which are taken at 0, 0.36, 0.63, and 0.93 s in
By subtracting the blank background (10 mM Tris buffer; pH 8) and correlating the reduced pixel intensity to the dye concentration, the concentration intensity contour in the region highlighted in
To underscore that ion permeation into the granule is necessary for this 106-fold dynamic super-concentration, which was not observed in earlier steady-state experiments with smaller pores, the experiments at various ionic strengths and with a wax bead 71 of similar dimension are carried out. As seen in
A similar co-ion concentration in the bulk region near the pole is observed when a positively charged granule is used with cationic dye Rhodamine B, as shown in the
Similarly when a negatively charged granule is in the reservoir, the trapping of anionic microspheres tagged with fluorescein dyes is seen. The sequential images in
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that, based upon the teachings herein, changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention and its broader aspects. Therefore, the appended claims are intended to encompass within their scope of all such changes and modifications as are within the true spirit and scope of the exemplary embodiments of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61051827 | May 2008 | US |