Capillary Force-Driven Quantitative Plasma Separation Method for Application of Whole Blood Detection Microfluidic Chip

Micromachines (Basel). 2024 May 1;15(5):619. doi: 10.3390/mi15050619.

Abstract

Separating plasma or serum from blood is essential for precise testing. However, extracting precise plasma quantities outside the laboratory poses challenges. A recent study has introduced a capillary force-driven membrane filtration technique to accurately separate small plasma volumes. This method efficiently isolates 100-200 μL of pure human whole blood with a 48% hematocrit, resulting in 5-30 μL of plasma with less than a 10% margin of error. The entire process is completed within 20 min, offering a simple and cost-effective approach to blood separation. This study has successfully addressed the bottleneck in self-service POCT, ensuring testing accuracy. This innovative method shows promise for clinical diagnostics and point-of-care testing.

Keywords: filter; microfluidic chip; quantitative separation; whole-blood.