scholarly journals Advancement of Measurement Techniques for Tunable Resistive Pulse Sensing

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Eva Weatherall

<p>Tunable resistive pulse sensing (TRPS) is a particle-by-particle analysis technique combining the Coulter principle with size-tunable pores. TRPS can be used to characterize biological and synthetic particles 50 nm - 20 µm in diameter. Information is obtained from the resistive pulse signal, a transient change in ionic current observed when a particle passes through the pore. TRPS has been shown to provide excellent resolution and accuracy for measuring particle size and concentration as well as providing information about particle charge. TRPS is therefore applicable to many industrial and fundamental research areas involving aptamers, drug delivery particles, extracellular vesicles and other biological particle types. Advancement of this technology requires a better understanding of the technique, particularly in the area of particle surface charge measurement and this Thesis helps to provide that understanding.  In this work, firstly particle ζ-potential measurement using TRPS was investigated. A number of different measurement methods are presented and the uncertainties associated with each method are outlined. The ζ-potential for a variety of particles with different surface charges were measured in a range of electrolytes.  Particle ζ-potential measurements were then improved upon with the addition of streaming potential measurements to measure the pore surface charge. The ζ-potential of the pore surface, which makes a significant contribution to particle ζ-potential calculations, was measured using a set up which works alongside the qNano. Streaming potential measurements were also used to investigate changes in the pore surface charge following application of number of different chemical coatings. The volume of data collected and detail of analysis in this work (including uncertainties) is unprecedented in TRPS ζ potential measurements.  Biphasic pulses arising from the charge on the particles were investigated. The pulse is conventionally resistive, but biphasic pulses which include both resistive and conductive components are significant for less than 50 mM salt concentrations when measuring 200 nm particles. The experimental variables investigated include the concentration of the electrolyte, particle charge, pore size, applied voltage, and the direction of particlemotion. Conductive pulse size was seen to decrease with increasing electrolyte concentration and pore size and increase with applied voltage. A linear relationship was found between conductive pulse magnitude and particle surface group density. The influence of direction of motion on conductive pulses was consistent with concentration polarization of an ion selective pore. Biphasic pulses were also seen to affect conventional TRPS particle size measurements.  Finally, size distribution broadening due to varying particle trajectories was investigated. Pulse size distributions for monodisperse particles became broader when the pore size was increased and featured two distinct peaks. Relatively large pulses are produced by particles with trajectories passing near to the edge of the pore. Other experiments determined that pulse size distributions are independent of applied voltage but broaden with increasing pressure applied across the membrane.</p>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Eva Weatherall

<p>Tunable resistive pulse sensing (TRPS) is a particle-by-particle analysis technique combining the Coulter principle with size-tunable pores. TRPS can be used to characterize biological and synthetic particles 50 nm - 20 µm in diameter. Information is obtained from the resistive pulse signal, a transient change in ionic current observed when a particle passes through the pore. TRPS has been shown to provide excellent resolution and accuracy for measuring particle size and concentration as well as providing information about particle charge. TRPS is therefore applicable to many industrial and fundamental research areas involving aptamers, drug delivery particles, extracellular vesicles and other biological particle types. Advancement of this technology requires a better understanding of the technique, particularly in the area of particle surface charge measurement and this Thesis helps to provide that understanding.  In this work, firstly particle ζ-potential measurement using TRPS was investigated. A number of different measurement methods are presented and the uncertainties associated with each method are outlined. The ζ-potential for a variety of particles with different surface charges were measured in a range of electrolytes.  Particle ζ-potential measurements were then improved upon with the addition of streaming potential measurements to measure the pore surface charge. The ζ-potential of the pore surface, which makes a significant contribution to particle ζ-potential calculations, was measured using a set up which works alongside the qNano. Streaming potential measurements were also used to investigate changes in the pore surface charge following application of number of different chemical coatings. The volume of data collected and detail of analysis in this work (including uncertainties) is unprecedented in TRPS ζ potential measurements.  Biphasic pulses arising from the charge on the particles were investigated. The pulse is conventionally resistive, but biphasic pulses which include both resistive and conductive components are significant for less than 50 mM salt concentrations when measuring 200 nm particles. The experimental variables investigated include the concentration of the electrolyte, particle charge, pore size, applied voltage, and the direction of particlemotion. Conductive pulse size was seen to decrease with increasing electrolyte concentration and pore size and increase with applied voltage. A linear relationship was found between conductive pulse magnitude and particle surface group density. The influence of direction of motion on conductive pulses was consistent with concentration polarization of an ion selective pore. Biphasic pulses were also seen to affect conventional TRPS particle size measurements.  Finally, size distribution broadening due to varying particle trajectories was investigated. Pulse size distributions for monodisperse particles became broader when the pore size was increased and featured two distinct peaks. Relatively large pulses are produced by particles with trajectories passing near to the edge of the pore. Other experiments determined that pulse size distributions are independent of applied voltage but broaden with increasing pressure applied across the membrane.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 88 (17) ◽  
pp. 8648-8656 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Weatherall ◽  
Peter Hauer ◽  
Robert Vogel ◽  
Geoff R. Willmott

2016 ◽  
Vol 409 (1) ◽  
pp. 349-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma L. C. J. Blundell ◽  
Matthew J. Healey ◽  
Elizabeth Holton ◽  
Muttuswamy Sivakumaran ◽  
Sarabjit Mastana ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 112 (3) ◽  
pp. 331a
Author(s):  
Yinghua Qiu ◽  
Anna Dawid ◽  
Preston Hinkle ◽  
Yunfei Chen ◽  
Zuzanna Siwy

2016 ◽  
Vol 408 (21) ◽  
pp. 5757-5768 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma L. C. J. Blundell ◽  
Matthew J. Healey ◽  
Elizabeth Holton ◽  
Muttuswamy Sivakumaran ◽  
Sarabjit Manstana ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Luong Duy Thanh ◽  
Damien Jougnot ◽  
Santiago G Solazzi ◽  
Nguyen Van Nghia ◽  
Phan Van Do

Summary Seismoelectric signals are generated by electrokinetic coupling from seismic wave propagation in fluid-filled porous media. This process is directly related to the existence of an electrical double layer at the interface between the pore fluid and minerals composing the pore walls. The seismoelectric method attracts the interest of researchers in different areas, from oil and gas reservoir characterization to hydrogeophysics, due to the sensitivity of the seismoelectric signals to medium and fluid properties. In this work, we propose a physically-based model for the dynamic streaming potential coupling coefficient (SPCC) by conceptualizing a porous medium as a bundle of tortuous capillaries characterized by presenting different pore size distributions (PSD). The results show that the dynamic streaming potential coupling coefficient is a complex function depending on the properties of pore fluid, mineral-pore fluid interfaces, microstructural parameters of porous media and frequency. Parameters influencing the dynamic SPCC are investigated and explained. In particular, we show that the PSD affects the transition frequency as well as the shape of the SPCC response as a function of frequency. The proposed model is then compared with published data and previous models. It is found that the approach using the lognormal distribution is in very good agreement with experimental data as well as with previous models. Conversely, the approach that uses the fractal distribution provides a good match with published data for sandstone samples but not for sand samples. This result implies that the fractal PSD may not be pertinent for the considered sand samples, which exhibit a relatively narrow distribution of pore sizes. Our proposed approach can work for any PSD, for example, including complex ones such as double porosity or inferred from direct measurements. This makes the proposed models more versatile than models available in literature.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document