## Abstract Fouling of the membrane by cell and protein mixtures can result in severe flux declines, leading to the eventual need to clean or replace the membrane. In this study multi‐photon microscopy, a fluorescence‐based technique is used to 3‐D image in situ the fouling of microfiltration membr
In Situ Fabrication of Cross-Linked Protein Membranes by Using Microfluidics
✍ Scribed by Greeshma Nair; Joseph F. Gargiuli; N. Raveendran Shiju; Zimei Rong; Evgeniy Shapiro; Dimitris Drikakis; Pankaj Vadgama
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 444 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1439-4227
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
We report a novel technique for preparing cross‐linked protein membranes within microchannels by using an interfacial cross‐linking reaction. Glass microchannels with a Y input were assembled by using a simple adhesive bonding technique to achieve dual, parallel laminar flows. Membrane formation utilised an interfacial reaction at the liquid–liquid interface, which involved bovine serum albumin (aqueous solution with a flow rate of 300 μL min^−1^) and terephthaloyl chloride (xylene solution with a flow rate of 700 μL min^−1^), to form thin (∼25 μm) cross‐linked films along the length of the channel under the continuous pressure‐driven laminar flow. Such microfabricated membranes could extend the separation potential of any microfluidic structure to provide a stable barrier layer. Furthermore, degradation of the membrane was possible by using an alkali sodium dodecyl sulfate solution, which led to the complete disappearance of the membrane. These membranes could facilitate additional modification to allow for different permeability properties by controlled degradation. The one‐step in situ membrane‐fabrication methodology reported here generated precisely localised membranes and avoided the complexities of subcomponent assembly, which require complicated alignment of small, preformed membranes. This methodology could become the basis for sophisticated microseparation systems, biosensors and several “lab‐on‐a‐chip” devices.
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