abstract
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There is an immediate need for the development of rapid and reliable methods for microparticle and cell assessments, and electrokinetic (EK) phenomena can be exploited to meet that need in a low cost and label-free fashion. The present study combines modeling and experimentation to separate a binary mixture of microparticles of the same size (5.1 ¿m), shape (spherical), and substrate material (polystyrene), but with a difference in particle zeta potentials of only ~14 mV, by applying direct current (DC)-biased low-frequency alternating current (AC) voltages in an insulator-based-EK (iEK) system. Four distinct separations were carried out to systematically study the effect of fine-tuning each of the three main characteristics of the applied voltage: frequency, amplitude, and DC bias. The results indicate that fine-tuning each parameter improved the separation from an initial separation resolution R
s = 0.5 to a final resolution Rs = 3.1 of the fully fine-tuned separation. The separation method exhibited fair reproducibility in retention time with variations ranging from 6 to 26% between experimental repetitions. The present study demonstrates the potential to extend the limits of iEK systems coupled with carefully fine-tuned DC-biased low-frequency AC voltages to perform discriminatory micron-sized particle separations. © 2023 American Chemical Society.