Ciencias Exactas y Ciencias de la Salud

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11285/551039

Pertenecen a esta colección Tesis y Trabajos de grado de las Maestrías correspondientes a las Escuelas de Ingeniería y Ciencias así como a Medicina y Ciencias de la Salud.

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  • Tesis de maestría
    Experimental and computational study of GelMA microgel generation and deformation using a microfluidic device
    (Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey, 2020-12-01) Taravatfard, Zahra; Martínez Chapa, Sergio Omar; qro /|bqrotbecerra/tolmquevedo; Ray, Mallar; School of Engineering and Sciences; Campus Monterrey; Madadelahi, Masoud
    Gene editing is a technique through which DNA segments can be modified within the genome of a living organism. Despite the many potential applications, current gene editing techniques are still low-throughput and have several limitations. On one side, the conventional 2D cell culturing techniques suffer from low cell viability and proliferation. On the other side, transfection techniques commonly using exogenous materials lead to off-target effects in cells. Droplet-based microfluidic devices (DBMD) show great potential for gene editing. They allow precise single-cell manipulation, encapsulation and might eventually achieve high throughput. As an example, using a DBMD, cells encapsulated in GelMA microgels have kept viability and shown proliferation. Moreover, DBMD might play a key role in cell transfection. Particularly, mechanical squeeze of cells encapsulated in droplets and moving through a narrow channel favors the entrance of foreign materials into the cells. This thesis presents the design and implementation of droplet-based microfluidic systems for fabrication of monodisperse GelMA microgels. First, a DBMD was developed using three techniques of soft lithography, stereolithography, and cutter plotting and the comparison between the devices was conducted. Second, fabrication of both, solid-like as well as core-shell microgels with average size of 133.43±5 µm was demonstrated. It was shown the generated microgels have spherical morphology with pore size area of 23.28±6 um2. Finally, computer simulation was used to emulate microgel indentation (solid-like and core-shell) with or without cells; as well as the throughput of the designed confinement channel. From the indentation of particles, it was concluded that lower stiffnesses was obtained for core-shells in comparison to solid-like microgels. It is also shown that a 21% and 24 % deformation in microgels containing cells causes 30% and 40% deformation of encapsulated cells, respectively, vital in cells transfection-based confinement channel application. From computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model, we observed the enhancement of the throughput of the device by selecting a longer confinement length. It is expected these preliminary results presented in this thesis will motivate other works that eventually lead to the development of efficient droplet-based microfluidic devices for cell transfection.
  • Tesis de maestría
    Optical flow sensor for droplet-based Lab-on-PCB devices
    (Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey) Solano Teran, Daniel Hugo; CAMACHO LEON, SERGIO; 213140; Camacho León, Sergio; puelquio, emipsanchez; Luque Estepa, Antonio; Vázquez Piñón, Matías; Escuela de Ingeniería y Ciencias; Campus Monterrey
    Advancements on Lab-on-a-PCB devices nowadays focus on design goals such as Affordable, Sensitive, Specific, User-friendly, Rapid and robust, Equipment-free, Deliverable to end-users (ASSURED) devices. However, most of these new systems present external equipment dependencies, complex set-up processes, low reproducibility factors, and intricate manufacturing processes. For many industries (medical, pharmaceutical, cosmetics), Lab-on-a-PCB devices are capable of characterizing multiphase systems such as cell-in-droplets identification, flow-phase characterization, and micromixing detection. Thus, this work presents a new optical droplet detector, employing common and cost-effective electronics components. The device consists of a fluid channel between a light-emitting diode (LED) and a photo-resistor (LDR), whose voltage variation is measured and then processed with an ARDUINO microcontroller. This new sensor can determine different multiphase flow properties such as velocity, flow, droplet lengths, and volume with high-speed throughput up to 1000 droplets per second. Furthermore, this sensor presents a modular electronic design that provides a simple calibration, high adaptability, and a standardized fabrication process. Therefore, it creates a cost-effective, portable, easy-to-fabricate, and plug-and-play environment for the alignment with the ASSURED criteria. Droplet detection and characterization showed MRE values ranging from 2.4% up to 17%. The lowest MRE value was obtained using a two-phase flow system with water-in-air droplets at a sampling rate of 2.3 kHz for flow rates starting at 20 up to 425 μL/min. In contrast, the highest MRE value reported was under a three-phase flow system for dyed and pure water-in-air droplets at a 5 kHz sampling rate at a 250 µL/min flow rate.
En caso de no especificar algo distinto, estos materiales son compartidos bajo los siguientes términos: Atribución-No comercial-No derivadas CC BY-NC-ND http://www.creativecommons.mx/#licencias
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