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"High-throughput measurement of elastic moduli of microfibers by rope coiling", a paper in PNAS

Apr 26, 2024

Professor Anderson Shum of the Department of Mechanical Engineering and his team worked on the research for the topic “High-throughput measurement of elastic moduli of microfibers by rope coiling”. The research findings were recently published in PNAS on March 13, 2024.

Details of the publication:

High-throughput measurement of elastic moduli of microfibers by rope coiling

Yuan Liu, Jack H. Y. Lo, Janine K. Nunes, Howard A. Stone, Ho Cheung Shum, article in PNAS

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2303679121

 

Abstract

There are many fields where it is of interest to measure the elastic moduli of tiny fragile fibers, such as filamentous bacteria, actin filaments, DNA, carbon nanotubes, and functional microfibers. The elastic modulus is typically deduced from a sophisticated tensile test under a microscope, but the throughput is low and limited by the time-consuming and skill-intensive sample loading/unloading. Here, we demonstrate a simple microfluidic method enabling the high-throughput measurement of the elastic moduli of microfibers by rope coiling using a localized compression, where sample loading/unloading are not needed between consecutive measurements. The rope coiling phenomenon occurs spontaneously when a microfiber flows from a small channel into a wide channel. The elastic modulus is determined by measuring either the buckling length or the coiling radius. The throughput of this method, currently 3,300 fibers per hour, is a thousand times higher than that of a tensile tester. We demonstrate the feasibility of the method by testing a nonuniform fiber with axially varying elastic modulus. We also demonstrate its capability for in situ inline measurement in a microfluidic production line. We envisage that high-throughput measurements may facilitate potential applications such as screening or sorting by mechanical properties and real-time control during production of microfibers.