channel, this is achieved by the balance of two forces: (1) shear-
gradient inertial lift force induced by the velocity gradient of the
fluid, and (2) wall-induced lift force originated from wall lubrica-
tion effect and an asymmetry in pressure distribution around the
particle adjacent to the wall [5]. The balance between these two
forces develops particle equilibrium positions in the channel,
depending
on
the
channel
cross-sectional
shape
and
the
corresponding cross-laterally wall-effect lift force. Figure 1a illus-
trates four equilibrium positions of particles with a particle size a,
for a microchannel with a square cross section. The net inertial lift
force is a power-law function of particle size (FL ~ an, n > 1). When
the particle size relative to the channel hydraulic diameter (a/DH)
is greater than 0.07, the inertial focusing of neutrally buoyant
particles can be guaranteed [6].
Inertial microfluidics is divided into four types according to
their geometries: straight channels, serpentine channels, contrac-
tion–expansion channels, and spiral channels [7]. Adding curvature
to the channel generates a secondary flow perpendicular to the
main flow due to the centrifugal force. The secondary drag force
scales linearly with particle size (FD ~ a) [8], where coupling it with
the net inertial lift force leads to particle size-based differentially
equilibriums (Fig. 1b). Among these structured channels, spiral
microfluidic channels with trapezoidal cross-sections have the high-
est throughput in a single unit, with simple settings and high
recovery rate. These features enable the spiral channels as potential
candidates for large-volume liquid processing through multiplex-
ing [9, 10]. It has been demonstrated for cell retention in perfusion
bioreactors [11], as well as microcarrier-based adherent cells har-
vesting and microcarrier-cell complex retention in a perfusion con-
dition [8, 12]. It was showed that the sorted cells express their
normal surface markers, maintained the spindle morphology with
uncompromised growth kinetics, differentiation potency and ther-
apeutic properties after being processed by these devices. Com-
pared to the traditional harvesting technologies, the membrane
technology, spiral inertial microfluidic devices possess low-cost
attributes due to ease of fabrication and maintenance. There is no
need for frequent replacement due to clogging, which reduces the
cost and the risk of contaminations. The throughput can be scaled
out significantly by paralleling the spiral channels, while the foot-
print of the whole setup remains relatively small.
Here, we presented the 3D printing technology-based method
for rapid and low-cost fabrication of spiral microfluidic devices
through (1) direct printing of the microchannels and (2) printing
the master mold for soft lithography-based channel fabrication. We
demonstrated that this method is capable of fabricating microflui-
dic devices within 24 h and subsequently separate adherent cells
from microcarriers under high-throughput and scalable manner.
We have achieved 77% cell recovery rate with 99% microcarriers
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