4.8 Article

Mechanisms of pulsed laser microbeam release of SU-8 polymer Micropallets for the collection and separation of adherent cells

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 80, Issue 12, Pages 4675-4679

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac800129a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [P41 RR001192-275133, P41 RR001192, P41 RR001192-285742, P41-RR-01192, P41 RR001192-275134] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIBIB NIH HHS [R01 EB004436-02, R01 EB007612, R01 EB007612-01, R01 EB004436-03, R01 EB007612-02, R01 EB004436-05, R01 EB004436, R01 EB004436-01, R01 EB007612-03, R01 EB004436-04, R01-EB07612, R01-EB04436] Funding Source: Medline

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The release of individual polymer micropallets from glass substrates using highly focused laser pulses has been demonstrated for the efficient separation, collection, and expansion of single, adherent cells from a heterogeneous cell population. Here, we use fast-frame photography to examine the mechanism and dynamics of micropallet release produced by pulsed laser microbeam irradiation at lambda = 532 nm using pulse durations ranging between 240 ps and 6 ns. The time-resolved images show the laser microbeam irradiation to result in plasma formation at the interface between the glass coverslip and the polymer micropallet. The plasma formation. results in the emission of a shock wave and the ablation of material within the focal volume. Ablation products are generated at high pressure due to the confinement offered by the polymer adhesion to the glass substrate. The ablation products expand underneath the micropallet on a time scale of several hundred nanoseconds. This expansion disrupts the polymer-glass interface and accomplishes the release of the pallet from its glass substrate on the microsecond time scale (similar to 1.5 mu s). Our experimental investigation demonstrates that the threshold energy for pallet release is constant (similar to 2 mu J) over a 25-fold range of pulse duration spanning the picosecond to nanosecond domain. Taken together, these results implicate that pallet release accomplished via pulsed laser microbeam irradiation is an energy-driven plasma-mediated ablation process.

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