Issue 1, 2015

A solvent replenishment solution for managing evaporation of biochemical reactions in air-matrix digital microfluidics devices

Abstract

Digital microfluidics (DMF) is a powerful technique for sample preparation and analysis for a broad range of biological and chemical applications. In many cases, it is desirable to carry out DMF on an open surface, such that the matrix surrounding the droplets is ambient air. However, the utility of the air-matrix DMF format has been severely limited by problems with droplet evaporation, especially when the droplet-based biochemical reactions require high temperatures for long periods of time. We present a simple solution for managing evaporation in air-matrix DMF: just-in-time replenishment of the reaction volume using droplets of solvent. We demonstrate that this solution enables DMF-mediated execution of several different biochemical reactions (RNA fragmentation, first-strand cDNA synthesis, and PCR) over a range of temperatures (4–95 °C) and incubation times (up to 1 h or more) without use of oil, humidifying chambers, or off-chip heating modules. Reaction volumes and temperatures were maintained roughly constant over the course of each experiment, such that the reaction kinetics and products generated by the air-matrix DMF device were comparable to those of conventional benchscale reactions. This simple yet effective solution for evaporation management is an important advance in developing air-matrix DMF for a wide variety of new, high-impact applications, particularly in the biomedical sciences.

Graphical abstract: A solvent replenishment solution for managing evaporation of biochemical reactions in air-matrix digital microfluidics devices

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Jun 2014
Accepted
30 Sep 2014
First published
01 Oct 2014

Lab Chip, 2015,15, 151-158

Author version available

A solvent replenishment solution for managing evaporation of biochemical reactions in air-matrix digital microfluidics devices

M. J. Jebrail, R. F. Renzi, A. Sinha, J. Van De Vreugde, C. Gondhalekar, C. Ambriz, R. J. Meagher and S. S. Branda, Lab Chip, 2015, 15, 151 DOI: 10.1039/C4LC00703D

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