An Integrated Lab on a CD Microfluidic Platform for High-Efficiency Blood Cell Separation and Passive Mixing
Reza Lotfi Navaei, Haniyeh Tehrani

TL;DR
This paper introduces a compact CD-based microfluidic platform capable of high-efficiency, label-free blood cell separation and passive mixing, facilitating improved diagnostics and personalized medicine applications.
Contribution
The study develops an integrated, multifunctional CD microfluidic device combining cell sorting, fluid control, and cell lysis modules on a single platform, with high separation efficiency and enhanced lysis performance.
Findings
Achieved 99.99% separation efficiency for blood components.
Designed and evaluated micro mixers with optimal fluid interaction.
Demonstrated potential for diagnostics and personalized medicine.
Abstract
Blood accounts for 7-8% of total body weight, with an average adult containing 4.5 to 6 quarts. It delivers oxygen and nutrients to cells, removes waste products, supports immunity, and regulates body temperature. Comprising over 4,000 components, including plasma, platelets, erythrocytes, and leukocytes, blood presents a challenge for isolating specific cell types due to its heterogeneity. In autologous therapies, target cells may be as rare as one per million background cells. This study presents the development of a compact disc (CD)-based microfluidic device for high-throughput, label-free separation of blood components. The system integrates three main modules on a single disk: cell sorting, fluid control, and cell lysis. The initial module utilizes Pinched Flow Fractionation (PFF) to separate red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets based on size, achieving 99.99%…
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