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SAMDAILY.US - ISSUE OF AUGUST 05, 2020 SAM #6824
SPECIAL NOTICE

99 -- MONODISPERSE MICRODROPLET GENERATION & STOPPING WITHOUT COALESCENCE

Notice Date
8/3/2020 2:59:36 PM
 
Notice Type
Special Notice
 
Contracting Office
LLNS � DOE CONTRACTOR Livermore CA 94551 USA
 
ZIP Code
94551
 
Solicitation Number
FBO476-20
 
Response Due
9/2/2020 9:00:00 PM
 
Archive Date
09/04/2020
 
Point of Contact
Connie Pitcock, Phone: 9254221072, Yash Vaishnav, Phone: 9254223538
 
E-Mail Address
pitcock1@llnl.gov, vaishnav1@llnl.gov
(pitcock1@llnl.gov, vaishnav1@llnl.gov)
 
Description
BACKGROUND The continued expansion of the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry in North America, coupled with increasing incidents of cancer, HIV, and Alzheimer�s disease around the globe, specifically China and India, has resulted in the growing need for more technologically advanced cell sorting techniques for microbial and disease identification. This need for better clinical diagnostic tools is even more apparent with the increasing threat of antibiotic resistant bacteria. However, high instrument cost coupled with an overall lack of technical knowledge and awareness regarding cell sorting continues to hamper the growth of this market. Despite these largely avoidable setbacks, advancements in microfluidic systems have given researchers the ability to work with compartmentalized, droplet sized sample volumes. Using droplets not only cuts the cost of reagents but also gives researchers the ability to better maintain and control the cells within the sample as well as provide quantitative information. This allows for more reliable and cost-effective separation and sorting processes. However, one of the limitations of the microfluidic systems is the steady-state phenomenon that generates hundreds to thousands of microdroplets per second. The following technology in this portfolio addresses the steady state issue associated with monodispersed microdroplet generation by preventing droplet coalescence. DESCRIPTION The steady-state phenomenon generates thousands of microdroplets per second which is a problem when the stream of droplets needs to be slowed down or stopped. LLNL technology provides a method for generating and trapping microdroplets at a desired location and subsequently stopping the stream of microdroplets without droplet coalescence. These microdroplets can then be chemically reacted, heated, cooled, optically interrogated, sorted and analyzed for as long as desired before channel flow is restarted. By trapping microdroplets at desired locations, greater optical or electromagnetic interrogation can occur. These results in a more thorough analysis of target analytes as well as increases reliability for techniques such as quantitative PCR. These attributes of the technology make it extremely useful for single-genome amplification and sequencing. The system also allows for channel washing between experiment. ADVANTAGES � Generating and trapping microdroplets at a desired location � Eliminates droplet coalescence � Greater optical or electromagnetic interrogation of trapped droplets POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS � Biowarfare detection � Genetic screenings for drug discovery � Genome sequencing � Food & beverage safety testing � Biomedical diagnostics � Forensics analysis � Enables flow cytometry, PCR, and single cell sequencing on trapped droplets DEVELOPMENT STATUS LLNL has obtained patents (US Patents 9,011,777; 9,266,107) covering this technology (LLNL Internal Case # IL-11817)
 
Web Link
SAM.gov Permalink
(https://beta.sam.gov/opp/3735265f3aa9431eade613c2b12f659a/view)
 
Record
SN05742649-F 20200805/200803230142 (samdaily.us)
 
Source
SAM.gov Link to This Notice
(may not be valid after Archive Date)

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