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  4. Kinetic masks: A new approach and device for dispersing biologically relevant fluids
 
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2009
Journal Article
Title

Kinetic masks: A new approach and device for dispersing biologically relevant fluids

Abstract
The controlled dispersion of fluids, particularly biologically relevant solutions in micro-volumes, is of high practical interest in biotechnology and medicine. Pharmaceutical test assays, for example, need a method for the fast and defined deposition of fluid samples. Most current micro-dispensing methods, i.e. contact-based pin printing, have problems such as time delays, limited dosing velocity, minimum volume or high interference that limit biological applications. Spraying techniques suffer from a lack of reproducibility; a defined deposition of samples on targets is not possible. Here, we introduce a new method for the parallel and spatially defined dispersion of many micro-volumes that overcomes disadvantages of common micro-dispensers. The overall approach is that a fluid drop, produced by a droplet generator, falls on a free trajectory with a defined kinetic energy, and is split by a masking unit placed perpendicular to the flight direction into at least two smaller droplets (Zimmermann et al. in Method and device for dosing fluid media, WO/2002/102515, Germany, 2002). On the target, the resulting droplets form reproducible patterns, which are enlarged and scalable images of the grid pattern. Possible applications for this method are non-contact cell patterning, cell encapsulation, cryopreservation and fast mixing processes in micro-volumes. Here, we use this method for the direct and defined parallel positioning of cell suspensions on specific Substrates, which call be useful for test assays, tissue engineering and cryopreservation.
Author(s)
Meiser, I.  
Shirley, S.G.
Zimmermann, H.  
Journal
Microsystem Technologies  
Open Access
DOI
10.1007/s00542-009-0892-4
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Biomedizinische Technik IBMT  
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