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A droplet robotic system enabled by electret-induced polarization on droplet.

Ruotong ZhangChengzhi ZhangXiaoxue FanChristina C K Au YeungHuiyanchen LiHaisong LinHo-Cheung Shum
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Robotics for scientific research are evolving from grasping macro-scale solid materials to directly actuating micro-scale liquid samples. However, current liquid actuation mechanisms often restrict operable liquid types or compromise the activity of biochemical samples by introducing interfering mediums. Here, we propose a robotic liquid handling system enabled by a novel droplet actuation mechanism, termed electret-induced polarization on droplet (EPD). EPD enables all-liquid actuation in principle and experimentally exhibits generality for actuating various inorganic/organic liquids with relative permittivity ranging from 2.25 to 84.2 and volume from 500 nL to 1 mL. Moreover, EPD is capable of actuating various biochemical samples without compromising their activities, including various body fluids, living cells, and proteins. A robotic system is also coupled with the EPD mechanism to enable full automation. EPD's high adaptability with liquid types and biochemical samples thus promotes the automation of liquid-based scientific experiments across multiple disciplines.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • high throughput
  • single cell
  • minimally invasive
  • high glucose
  • robot assisted
  • oxidative stress
  • fluorescent probe
  • water soluble