Magnetic Liquids for Lab-on-a-Chip and Rapid
Diagnostics Applications
Hür Köser
Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering, Yale University
Monday, September 25, 2006
2:00 PM in the Birck Building, Room 2001
Ferrofluids
are stable colloidal suspensions of nanosize ferromagnetic particles
in either aqueous or oil-based media. They have found their way into a
variety of applications, such as sealing, damping and blood
separation; in dilute, functionalized forms, they have also been used
as drug delivery and MRI contrast agents. These complex liquids offer
attractive alternatives to moving mechanical components in
miniaturized cooling, pumping and integrated
micro-total-analysis-systems for chip-scale chemistry and biology.
Water-based ferrofluids can also be made bio-compatible, rendering
them useful in novel cell manipulation and sorting schemes. We have
recently proposed, modeled and experimentally confirmed that
ferrofluids can be actuated and pumped in closed-loop geometries, even
within geometries of micro-scale devices. The pumping dynamics depend
on the average nanoparticle size within the ferrofluid. If particles
are functionalized with a receptor molecule, the entire volume of the
ferrofluid becomes a pathogen sensor that can detect minute quantities
of target antigens efficiently and effectively. We are working on
creating portable, disposable, cheap and miniaturized sensor and
diagnostic devices based on this dynamic effect. We also briefly
report on the development of a novel, ferrofluid-based assay to study
a large quantity of ligand-receptor interactions quickly and
simultaneously, without the need for any wash cycles.
Dr.
Koser obtained double B.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering and
Physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), a
Master's of Engineering degree for his work on magnetic random access
memory devices at IBM T. J. Watson Research Laboratory. He stayed at
MIT's Electrical Engineering Department the get a Ph.D. in the field
of Microsystems (2002). After a post doctoral work in microfluidics at
the Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT, he joined the
Electrical Engineering Department at Yale University as an Assistant
Professor in 2003, where he currently conducts research in micro and
nanotechnology applications to biomedical engineering and power
devices. Dr. Koser has recently received the NSF Career Award for his
work on ferrofluid dynamics and will be on a prestigious Junior
Faculty Fellowship (awarded by Yale University) during the next
academic year to expand his work on ferrofluids. He is also the
receipient of the 2003 Yale Information Technology Systems (ITS)
Instructional Innovation Award and the Moore Award for the development
of a microfluidics-based teaching laboratory.
Host: Cagri
Savran, Mechanical Engineering Department, (48601,
savran@purdue.edu)
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Annie Cheever, Area
Secretary
School of Electrical and Computer
Engineering
acheever@purdue.edu
Purdue University
Birck Nanotechnology Center, Room 2027
1205 West State Street
West Lafayette, IN 47907-1205
Phone: 765-496-8327 Fax: 765-496-6443
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