Teng Li, Yingshan Du, Bowen Cai, Michael R. Brooks, Chongpeng Qiu, Zhide Wang, Jiali Li, Luyu Bo, Y. Albert Pan and Zhenhua Tian
{"title":"In-Petri-dish acoustic vortex tweezers†","authors":"Teng Li, Yingshan Du, Bowen Cai, Michael R. Brooks, Chongpeng Qiu, Zhide Wang, Jiali Li, Luyu Bo, Y. Albert Pan and Zhenhua Tian","doi":"10.1039/D4LC00799A","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p >Acoustic tweezers, with the capability to manipulate tiny objects without physical contact, hold substantial potential for biomedical and biological research. However, current acoustic tweezers platforms face challenges in precise, selective, and multi-degree-of-freedom (multi-DoF) manipulation of objects in Petri dishes, making it difficult to integrate them into typical laboratory workflows. This paper presents an acoustic vortex tweezers platform that enables contactless, precise, multi-DoF, and multifunctional manipulation of micro-to-millimeter-scale objects within a Petri dish. The platform features an acoustic holography-based module, which uses a holographic lens to transform acoustic waves and generate a focused acoustic vortex beam. This beam carries sufficient energy to propagate through a Petri dish's bottom wall, creating a ring-shape intensity field for trapping tiny objects. Using lenses encoded with different topological charge numbers, vortex beams with varying diameters can be generated, allowing for trapping various-sized objects. Additionally, in combination with a 3-DoF linear motion module, our integrated platform enables high-resolution translation of acoustically trapped objects along complex paths. We experimentally demonstrated our platform's diverse capabilities, including concentrating micro-objects, trapping flowing micro-objects to create an agglomerate, translating a microparticle and an agglomerate along complex paths, as well as trapping, rotating and translating a zebrafish larva in horizontal and vertical postures. With these capabilities, we expect our in-Petri-dish acoustic vortex tweezers to emerge as a valuable tool for the contactless, high-resolution, programmable handling of tiny biomaterials in biomedical and biological research.</p>","PeriodicalId":85,"journal":{"name":"Lab on a Chip","volume":" 15","pages":" 3766-3778"},"PeriodicalIF":5.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2025/lc/d4lc00799a?page=search","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Lab on a Chip","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2025/lc/d4lc00799a","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Acoustic tweezers, with the capability to manipulate tiny objects without physical contact, hold substantial potential for biomedical and biological research. However, current acoustic tweezers platforms face challenges in precise, selective, and multi-degree-of-freedom (multi-DoF) manipulation of objects in Petri dishes, making it difficult to integrate them into typical laboratory workflows. This paper presents an acoustic vortex tweezers platform that enables contactless, precise, multi-DoF, and multifunctional manipulation of micro-to-millimeter-scale objects within a Petri dish. The platform features an acoustic holography-based module, which uses a holographic lens to transform acoustic waves and generate a focused acoustic vortex beam. This beam carries sufficient energy to propagate through a Petri dish's bottom wall, creating a ring-shape intensity field for trapping tiny objects. Using lenses encoded with different topological charge numbers, vortex beams with varying diameters can be generated, allowing for trapping various-sized objects. Additionally, in combination with a 3-DoF linear motion module, our integrated platform enables high-resolution translation of acoustically trapped objects along complex paths. We experimentally demonstrated our platform's diverse capabilities, including concentrating micro-objects, trapping flowing micro-objects to create an agglomerate, translating a microparticle and an agglomerate along complex paths, as well as trapping, rotating and translating a zebrafish larva in horizontal and vertical postures. With these capabilities, we expect our in-Petri-dish acoustic vortex tweezers to emerge as a valuable tool for the contactless, high-resolution, programmable handling of tiny biomaterials in biomedical and biological research.
期刊介绍:
Lab on a Chip is the premiere journal that publishes cutting-edge research in the field of miniaturization. By their very nature, microfluidic/nanofluidic/miniaturized systems are at the intersection of disciplines, spanning fundamental research to high-end application, which is reflected by the broad readership of the journal. Lab on a Chip publishes two types of papers on original research: full-length research papers and communications. Papers should demonstrate innovations, which can come from technical advancements or applications addressing pressing needs in globally important areas. The journal also publishes Comments, Reviews, and Perspectives.