μSonic-hand: Biomedical micromanipulation driven by acoustic gas-liquid-solid interactions

Xiaoming Liu*, Yuyang Li*, Fengyu Liu, Qing Shi, Lixin Dong, Qiang Huang*, Tatsuo Arai, Toshio Fukuda

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Micromanipulation is crucial for operating and analyzing microobjects in advanced biomedical applications. However, safe, low-cost, multifunctional micromanipulation for operating bio-objects across scales and modalities remains inaccessible. Here, we propose a versatile micromanipulation method driven by acoustic gas-liquid-solid interactions, named μSonic-hand. The bubble contained at the end of a micropipette and the surrounding liquid form a gas-liquid multiphase system susceptible to acoustic waves. Driven by a piezoelectric transducer, the oscillating gas-liquid interface induces acoustic microstreaming, markedly increasing the mass transfer efficiency. It enables multiple liquid micromanipulations, including mixing, dispersion, enhancing cell membrane permeability, and harvesting selected cells. Furthermore, a controllable three-dimensional axisymmetric vortex in an open environment overcomes the constraints of microfluidic chip, enabling stable trapping, rapid transportation, and multidirectional rotation of HeLa cells, embryos, and other bio-objects ranging from micrometers to millimeters. A variety of applications demonstrate that the μSonic-hand, with its wide-range capabilities, inherent biocompatibility, and extremely low cost could remarkably advance biomedical science.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereads8167
JournalScience advances
Volume11
Issue number13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Mar 2025

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