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Chemical Engineering Research Seminar
Dr. Blanca H. Lapizco-Encinas
Professor and Founding Faculty, Biomedical Engineering Department
Rochester Institute of Technology
Abstract
Microfluidics has revolutionized the manner in which many assessments/processes are carried out. Miniaturization offers attractive advantages over traditional bench-scale techniques: only small quantities of samples and reagents are required, higher resolution and sensitivity, improved level of integration, lower cost and much shorter processing times. Electrokinetics (EK) is one of the main pillars of microfluidics, electric-field driven techniques are suitable for wide range of applications due to their simplicity and robustness. Furthermore, EK-based microfluidic devices can exploit both linear and nonlinear EK phenomena, allowing for precise particle control in detection applications.
This seminar will be focused on the design of insulator-based electrokinetic (iEK) microfluidics devices that combine electrophoresis (EP), electroosmosis (EO) and dielectrophoresis (DEP) to achieve the characterization of polystyrene microparticles, viruses and cells. This work includes extensive experimentation with microdevices made from PDMS and mathematical with COMSOL Multiphysics. Within iEK, there are four main components; EO, linear EP, DEP, and non-linear EP of the second kind. It must be noted, however, that while many of the reports available in the literature attribute a great extent of particle behavior at higher electric fields to DEP, publications from the physics field and our recent work suggest that EP of the second kind may be the dominating mechanism of particle migration at high electric fields. Our group has developed novel approaches that allow identifying a unique EK signature of microorganisms that can be used to design tailored iEK microfluidic devices to be used for the rapid enrichment and identification of microorganisms. These findings from this study demonstrate the potential of iEK microfluidic devices for the rapid differentiation and identification of microorganisms by employing unique electrokinetic signatures.
Bio
Blanca H. Lapizco-Encinas is a Professor and a founding Faculty at the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Rochester Institute of Technology. Her current research efforts are focused on the development of electrokinetic-based microdevices that would answer the needs of a wide array of applications; from cell assessments for clinical/biomedical applications to food safety and environmental monitoring. Her research work has been funded by the NSF, NIH and other funding agencies in the US and Mexico, and she has received research awards from the Mexican Academy of Sciences and the L’OREAL for Women in Science program. More recently, she received the 2021 Board of Trustees Scholarship award at Rochester Institute of technology.
She serves as Editor-in-Chief for the Journal ELECTROPHORESIS published by Wiley, and has served as Vice-President and Councilor for the AES Electrophoresis Society. She has published 130+ peer-reviewed research articles, conference proceedings and book chapters. Dr. Lapizco-Encinas is a strong supporter of undergraduate research, and many undergraduate students working under her guidance have published peer-reviewed journal articles, including firs-author publications. She has organized several conferences including the Annual AES Meeting @ Scix and the International Symposium on Electroseparation and Liquid Phase-Separation Techniques Meeting.
Dr. Lapizco-Encinas received her BS and MS degrees in Chemical Engineering in Mexico, and her PhD also in Chemical Engineering from the University of Cincinnati. Prior to joining RIT, she was a post-doctoral researcher at Sandia National Laboratories, and held positions at Tennessee Tech. in the US, and Tecnológico de Monterrey and CINVESTAV-Monterrey in Mexico.
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