Abstract
Self-switching microfluidic circuits that are able to perform biochemical experiments in a parallel and autonomous manner, similar to instruction-embedded electronics, are rarely implemented. Here, we present design principles and demonstrations for gravity-driven, integrated, microfluidic pulsatile flow circuits. With a common gravity head as the only driving force, these fluidic oscillator arrays realize a wide range of periods (0.4 s-2 h) and flow rates (0.10-63 μl min-1) with completely independent timing between the multiple oscillator sub-circuits connected in parallel. As a model application, we perform systematic, parallel analysis of endothelial cell elongation response to different fluidic shearing patterns generated by the autonomous microfluidic pulsed flow generation system.
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CITATION STYLE
Kim, S. J., Yokokawa, R., Lesher-Perez, S. C., & Takayama, S. (2015). Multiple independent autonomous hydraulic oscillators driven by a common gravity head. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8301
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