AIP Publishing LLC
AIP Publishing LLC
  • pubs.aip.org
  • AIP
  • AIP China
  • University Science Books
  • Resources
    • Researchers
    • Librarians
    • Publishing Partners
    • Topical Portfolios
    • Commercial Partners
  • Publications

    Find the Right Journal

    Explore the AIP Publishing collection by title, topic, impact, citations, and more.
    Browse Journals

    Latest Content

    Read about the newest discoveries and developments in the physical sciences.
    See What's New

    Publications

    • Journals
    • Books
    • Physics Today
    • AIP Conference Proceedings
    • Scilight
    • Find the Right Journal
    • Latest Content
  • About
    • About Us
    • News and Announcements
    • Careers
    • Events
    • Leadership
    • Contact
  • pubs.aip.org
  • AIP
  • AIP China
  • University Science Books

Novel Lab-on-Chip Platform Promises to Expedite Cancer Diagnoses

  • January 28, 2025
  • Physics of Fluids
  • News
Share:

System features acoustofluidics to enable real-time, energy-efficient, and precise cell separation – and predict tumor cell migration.

From the Journal: Physics of Fluids

Illustration of fabricated optimal acousto-microfluidic chip for scale. Credit: Afshin Kouhkord and Naserifar Naser
Illustration of fabricated optimal acousto-microfluidic chip for scale. Credit: Afshin Kouhkord and Naserifar Naser

WASHINGTON, Jan. 28, 2025 – Cancer accounted for nearly 10 million deaths in 2020 – almost one in every six deaths globally – according to the World Health Organization. Because the detection of abnormal diseased cellular growth often occurs too late, timely cancer diagnosis remains one of humanity’s most pressing and elusive medical objectives. Recent research has focused on the detection in peripheral blood of rare circulating tumor cells (CTCs), which serve as noninvasive markers that can help inform diagnoses.

It is inherently difficult to separate controllable target cells to examine. Traditional methods typically require elaborate sample preparation, substantial equipment, and large sample volumes – and even then, it is not easy to efficiently separate the cells in question.

In Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing, a pair of researchers at the K. N. Toosi University of Technology in Tehran, Iran, proposed a novel system that uses standing surface acoustic waves to separate CTCs from red blood cells with unprecedented precision and efficiency. The platform that Afshin Kouhkord and Naser Naserifar developed integrates advanced computational modeling, experimental analysis, and artificial intelligence algorithms to analyze complex acoustofluidic phenomena.

“We combined machine learning algorithms with data-driven modeling and computational data to fine-tune a system for optimal recovery rates and cell separation rates,” said Naserifar. “Our system achieves 100% recovery at optimal conditions, with significant reductions in energy consumption through precise control of acoustic pressures and flow rates.”

As various ways of enriching particles through microfluidics have emerged, those that employ acoustofluidics are especially promising because they are biocompatible, generate high-force magnitudes at MPa pressure ranges, and produce cell-scale wavelengths.

With their particular method, the researchers included an innovative use of dualized pressure acoustic fields, which doubles the impact on target cells, and strategically located them at critical channel geometry positions on a lithium niobate substrate. By means of acoustic pressure applied within the microchannel, the system design provides for the generation of reliable datasets that illustrate cell interaction times and trajectory patterns, which will help predict tumor cell migration.

“We have produced an advanced, lab-on-chip platform that enables real-time, energy-efficient, and highly accurate cell separation,” said Kouhkord. “The technology promises to improve CTC separation efficiency and open new possibilities for earlier and more effective cancer diagnosis. It also paves the way for microengineering and applied AI in personalized medicine and cancer diagnostics.”

###

Article Title

Ultrasound-assisted microfluidic cell separation - A study on microparticles for enhanced cancer diagnosis

Authors

Afshin Kouhkord and Naserifar Naser

Author Affiliations

K. N. Toosi University of Technology


Physics of Fluids

Physics of Fluids is devoted to the publication of original theoretical, computational, and experimental contributions to the dynamics of gases, liquids, and complex or multiphase fluids.

http://pof.aip.org

Share:
  • Imagining the Physics of George R.R. Martin’s Fictional Universe
  • Listening for Multiple Mental Health Disorders

Keep Up With AIP Publishing

Sign up for the AIP newsletter to receive the latest news and information from AIP Publishing.
Sign Up

AIP PUBLISHING

1305 Walt Whitman Road,
Suite 110
Melville, NY 11747
(516) 576-2200

Resources

  • Researchers
  • Librarians
  • Publishing Partners
  • Commercial Partners

About

  • About Us
  • Careers 
  • Leadership

Support

  • Contact Us
  • Terms Of Use
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 AIP Publishing LLC