Microsystems & Nanoengineering (Feb 2022)

Self-assembled microtubular electrodes for on-chip low-voltage electrophoretic manipulation of charged particles and macromolecules

  • Apratim Khandelwal,
  • Nagendra Athreya,
  • Michael Q. Tu,
  • Lukas L. Janavicius,
  • Zhendong Yang,
  • Olgica Milenkovic,
  • Jean-Pierre Leburton,
  • Charles M. Schroeder,
  • Xiuling Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41378-022-00354-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract On-chip manipulation of charged particles using electrophoresis or electroosmosis is widely used for many applications, including optofluidic sensing, bioanalysis and macromolecular data storage. We hereby demonstrate a technique for the capture, localization, and release of charged particles and DNA molecules in an aqueous solution using tubular structures enabled by a strain-induced self-rolled-up nanomembrane (S-RuM) platform. Cuffed-in 3D electrodes that are embedded in cylindrical S-RuM structures and biased by a constant DC voltage are used to provide a uniform electrical field inside the microtubular devices. Efficient charged-particle manipulation is achieved at a bias voltage of <2–4 V, which is ~3 orders of magnitude lower than the required potential in traditional DC electrophoretic devices. Furthermore, Poisson–Boltzmann multiphysics simulation validates the feasibility and advantage of our microtubular charge manipulation devices over planar and other 3D variations of microfluidic devices. This work lays the foundation for on-chip DNA manipulation for data storage applications.