Electronic Sonotweezers: Particle Manipulation with Ultrasonic Arrays
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Glasgow
Department Name: School of Engineering
Abstract
We have carefully planned this research programme to pioneer a wholly new capability in ultrasonic particle manipulation to allow electronic sonotweezers to take their place alongside optical tweezers, dielectrophoresis and other techniques in the present and future particle manipulation toolkit.Following end-user demand, particle manipulation is a rapidly growing field, notably applied to the life sciences, with emerging applications in analysis and sorting, measurement of cell forces and tissue engineering. Existing devices have valuable capabilities but also limits in terms of forces that can be produced and measured, particle sizes that can be handled, their range of compatible buffer characteristics and sensitivity to heating, and suitability for integration with sensors in low cost devices. Key to our programme is the concept of dynamic potential energy landscapes and the established ability of ultrasound to create such landscapes, potentially to generate forces under electronic / computer control. Our principal technical aim is to exploit this in integrated sonotweezers to apply and measure larger forces over longer length scales, extend micromanipulation to larger particles, and demonstrate this in pathfinder applications in life sciences.To achieve our aims, we have already carried out successful feasibility studies and brought together an outstanding multidisciplinary team of investigators including internationally established members, some of the UK's most exciting young scientists and engineers, and appropriate overseas collaborators. Such a team is a prerequisite for what we recognise as a challenging, highly complex, densely interlinked programme. Over its four years, with strong management and built-in research flexibility, we will explore key areas of science, technology and applications to create and demonstrate electronic sonotweezers. Throughout the work, there will be parallel activity in understanding of physical principles, modelling and design, state-of-the-art fabrication, sensor integration, and applications testing.
Organisations
- University of Glasgow, United Kingdom (Lead Research Organisation)
- Defence Science & Tech Lab DSTL, United Kingdom (Project Partner)
- Genetix Ltd, United Kingdom (Project Partner)
- Weidlinger Associates Inc, United States (Project Partner)
- Piezo Composite Transducers (PCT) Ltd, United Kingdom (Project Partner)
- Loadpoint Ltd, United Kingdom (Project Partner)
Publications

Bernassau A
(2013)
Interactive manipulation of microparticles in an octagonal sonotweezer
in Applied Physics Letters

Gesellchen F
(2014)
Cell patterning with a heptagon acoustic tweezer--application in neurite guidance.
in Lab on a chip

Al-Rawhani MA
(2015)
Wireless fluorescence capsule for endoscopy using single photon-based detection.
in Scientific reports
Description | We demonstrated new methods for soft tissue engineering and cell sorting using ultrasonic tweezing. |
Exploitation Route | Novel forms of miniaturised cell sorting for use in biomedical applications. |
Sectors | Healthcare |