Dr. Adrienne Minerick
Associate Professor, Chemical Engineering
Dr. Minerick’s
research is focused on electrokinetics with an emphasis on
medical microdevices. The goals of her research group,
M.D.-ERL (Medical microdevice Engineering Research Laboratory),
are to develop portable, point-of-care devices that can provide
rapid, quantitative results for disease diagnosis and
monitoring. The primary focus of the group is on human blood
electrokinetics, more specifically dielectrophoresis (DEP),
and replacing expensive and time consuming off-line lab
analysis with rapid, point-of-care devices. The main area of
research that involves dielectrophoresis is ABO-Rh blood
typing. Classical dielectrophoretic theory predicts particle
behavior based on the particle’s polarizability relative to
the medium’s polarizability. Therefore, medium ion
distributions surrounding particles/cells are of paramount
importance to the cell’s resulting behavior in a DEP field.
Ongoing research involves detection of red cell interactions
with drugs and commercialization of the blood typing
technology funded by the
National Science Foundation.
Experiments completed in M.D.-ERL are supplemented with
COMSOL
simulations that can compare theory to experimental results.
These useful simulations help predict optimal experimental
parameters, saving time and money. For example, one newer
research area in M.D.-ERL is droplet micro fluidics. When
first designing micro devices, COMSOL simulations were used to
determine channel widths and flow rates of the two immiscible
phases necessary to create isolated micro environments within
droplets.
Additional research examines vitamin-levels in tears as an
indicator of nutrition in infants. The current medical test
for determining vitamin levels is blood plasma. A correlation
between the amount of vitamins in tears and plasma is being
investigated with funding from the Gerber Foundation.
Engineered medical microdevices, optimized via COMSOL
simulations, may provide a rapid, non-invasive, and cost
effective way to determine malnutrition.
Protein separations are also being researched in M.D.-ERL.
This project will advance small volume protein separations by
introducing a new approach, called surface isoelectric
focusing (sIEF). sIEF is featuring 100 times smaller than
previously reported IEF techniques. The easy and quick
fabrication process and a reusable property offer potential of
moving the device closer to a future commercialized protein
separation chip. Computation simulations enable optimizations
of operating and boundary conditions to achieve faster and
reliable sIEF separations.
For more information, please visit Dr. Minerick’s
Medical microDevice Engineering Research Laboratory (M.D.-ERL).
Recent publications
01 |
Methods and Systems for Identifying a Particle Using Dielectrophoresis T. N. G. Adams, A. R. Minerick, J. Collins, K. M. Leonard US Patent Application (filed October 3, 2014) |
02 |
Theoretical and Experimental Examination of Particle-Particle Interaction Effects on Induced Dipole Moments and Dielectrophoretic Responses of Multiple Particle Chains H. Moncada-Hernandez, E. Nagler, A. R. Minerick Electrophoresis, vol. 35, p. 1803 (2014) |
03 |
Frequency Sweep Rate Dependence on the Dielectrophoretic Response of Polystyrene Beads and Red Blood Cells T. N. Adams, K. M. Leonard, A.R. Minerick Biomicrofluidics, vol. 7, p. 064114 (2013) |
04 |
Human Red Blood Cell Deformation and Crenation Under High Frequency Spatial AC Field R. An, D. O. Wipf, A. R. Minerick Biomicrofluidics, vol. 8, p. 021803 (2014) |
05 |
Solution pH Change in Non-Uniform AC Electric Fields at Frequencies Above the Electrode Charging Frequency R. An, K. Massa, D. O. Wipf, A. R. Minerick Accpeted for publication in Biomicrofluidics, 2014. |