DC-Dielectrophoretic Manipulation and Isolation of Microplastic Particle-Treated Microalgae Cells in Asymmetric-Orifice-Based Microfluidic Chip

A novel direct-current dielectrophoretic (DC–DEP) method is proposed for the manipulation and isolation of microplastic particle (MP)-treated microalgae cells according to their dielectric properties in a microfluidic chip. The lateral migration and trajectory of the microalgae cells were investigated. To induce stronger DC–DEP effects, a non-homogeneous electric-field gradient was generated by applying the DC electric voltages through triple pairs of asymmetric orifices with three small orifices and one large orifice located on the opposite microchannel wall across the whole channel, leading to the enhanced magnitude of the non-uniform electric-field gradient and effective dielectrophoretic area. The effects of the applied voltage, the polystyrene (PS) adsorption coverage, and thickness on the DC–DEP behaviors and migration were numerically investigated, and it was found that the effect of the PS adsorption thickness of the Chlorella cells on the DC–DEP behaviors can be neglected, but the effect on their trajectory shifts cannot. In this way, the separation of 3 µm and 6 µm Chlorella coated with 100% PS particles and the isolation of the Chlorella cells from those coated with various coverages and thicknesses of PS particles was successfully achieved, providing a promising method for the isolation of microalgae cells and the removal of undesired cells from a target suspension.


Introduction
Microalgae are widely distributed around the world, and they are rich in protein, biological antibiotics, and oil [1,2], which are widely utilized in various fields, such as biotechnology, the food industry, and environmental protection [3][4][5]. As microalgae show outstanding biological properties, including high photosynthetic efficiency and simple structure, they can grow well under extreme environmental conditions of heavy metals, high salinity, nutrient deficiencies, and extreme temperatures. Moreover, microalgae show high potential for use in microbial remediation techniques for microplastic particles due to their high affinity, abundant binding sites, and large specific surface area [6][7][8][9][10]. In addition to their excellent removal capacity and eco-friendly properties, microalgae-removal technologies show advantages, including stable and simple processes, non-toxic side effects, fast growth rates compared to higher plants, and the possibility of producing value-added products, such as biofuels [11,12]. Therefore, the isolation of microalgae from contaminated objects (such as microplastics or impurities) is crucial. To address this challenge, the microfluidic system becomes an opportunity for the manipulation of microscale and nanoscale targets [13]. Compared with various sorting methods, dielectrophoresis is one of the most reliable techniques to provide the accurate manipulation of microalgae and controllable

Dielectrophoresis
Dielectrophoresis refers to the movement of polarizable particles suspended in a nonhomogeneous electric field. The dielectrophoretic force exerted on a spherical particle is generally expressed as [32].
where r represents the particle radius, ε * p and ε * m are the complex permittivity of the particle and surrounding medium, respectively, ε * = ε − (jσ/ω), ∇|E| 2 describes the electric-field gradient, the electrical conductivity and the angular frequency of electrical field are given by σ and ω, j = √ −1, and the real part of Clausius-Mossotti (CM) factor Re( f CM ) demonstrates the polarizability between the particle and the suspension. For the homogeneous ellipsoidal particles, the DEP forces still scale linearly with the particle size and the electric-field gradient, and the directions of the DEP behaviors are determined by the Re( f CM ), although they experience a frequency-dominant alignment torque and the principal axe tends to align with the electric field [33].
The adsorption process for the Chlorella coated with microplastic (MP) particles and the Chlorella coated with a MP-particle layer are shown in Figure 1. The manipulation of the Chlorella by the dielectrophoretic effects come from the combination of the dielectrophoretic forces exerted on the uncoated Chlorella and the MP-coated Chlorella and the total dielectrophoretic forces is described as [34]: F DEP, e f f = F DEP, C + F DEP,C−MP1 + F DEP,C−MP2 + . . . + F DEP,C−MPn (2) Micromachines 2023, 14, x FOR PEER REVIEW 3 of 14 and the electric-field gradient, and the directions of the DEP behaviors are determined by the Re( ), although they experience a frequency-dominant alignment torque and the principal axe tends to align with the electric field [33]. The adsorption process for the Chlorella coated with microplastic (MP) particles and the Chlorella coated with a MP-particle layer are shown in Figure 1. The manipulation of the Chlorella by the dielectrophoretic effects come from the combination of the dielectrophoretic forces exerted on the uncoated Chlorella and the MP-coated Chlorella and the total dielectrophoretic forces is described as [34]: The total volume of the Chlorella sphere and the Chlorella sphere coated with MP particles is approximately equal to the original Chlorella, which is written as [ where represents the radius of the original Chlorella, and , and , describe the effective radius of the Chlorella sphere and the Chlorella sphere coated with MP particles, respectively. The Cn is the volumetric coverage of the coated MP particles, and The total volume of the Chlorella sphere and the Chlorella sphere coated with MP particles is approximately equal to the original Chlorella, which is written as [34] where a represents the radius of the original Chlorella, and a e f f ,C and a e f f ,C−MPn describe the effective radius of the Chlorella sphere and the Chlorella sphere coated with MP particles, respectively. The C n is the volumetric coverage of the coated MP particles, and (1 − C n ) is the part of the Chlorella sphere with no coatings. The n describes different kinds of MP particles. The surface area for the coated-MP-particle part can be expressed as where P n represents the MP-particle-coating coverage on the Chlorella sphere and h = 2aP n . The corresponding volume of the coated area of the Chlorella sphere and the volumetric coverage C n can be written as Therefore, the volumetric coverage of the coated MP particles on the Chlorella sphere C n , and the effective radius of the Chlorella sphere a e f f ,C and the Chlorella sphere coated with MP particles a e f f ,C−MPn can be obtained given the MP-particle-coating coverage on the Chlorella sphere P n . Hence, the total DEP forces exerted on the Chlorella are described as Based on the shell model [33] of CM factor the Chlorella, the complex permittivity for the Chlorella in Equation (1) is given by where the factor γ 12 = a/a 1 , a and a 1 represent the radius of the Chlorella and its membrane, respectively. The complex permittivity for the Chlorella sphere coated with MP particles is expressed as where the factor γ 23 = a 2 /a , a 2 is the radius of the Chlorella sphere with the MP-particlecoating layer. When only applying the DC electric field, the f CM,C becomes solely dependent on the electrical conductivity [35], which is rewritten by where σ C is the electrical conductivity of the Chlorella sphere. The DC-DEP force exerted on the Chlorella coated with MP particles can be described as

Numerical Methods
It can be inferred from Equation (13) that the magnitude of the total DC-DEP forces scales linearly with the diameter of Chlorella sphere and the non-homogeneous electric-field gradient, while the direction of the dielectrophoretic trajectory is dependent on the sign of Chlorella-dependent Re( f CM, C ). In this way, the size-based sorting of Chlorella is straightforward. In addition, as discussed in Equation (8), the value of Re( f CM, C ) depends on the coverage, thickness, and type of MP-particle coating. If the Re( f CM, C ) > 0, the Chlorella is attracted towards the maximum electric-field gradient by the positive DEP forces. By contrast, they are repelled away by negative DEP effects and move away from the high-electric-field area. In this way, the isolation of Chlorella with different MP-particle coatings can be achieved. In this study, a novel DC-DEP manipulation method for the isolation of Chlorella microalgae cells is proposed by applying a relatively low electric field via the triple-orifice-based asymmetric-orifice structure across the whole microchannel, which is shown in Figure 2. This channel consists of three inlet and two outlet channels with a width of 80 µm, connected by a horizontal mainchannel, which is 300 µm in length. All these channels are shifted 45 • from the horizontal channel. In this mainchannel, the asymmetric orifices with a triple small orifice are 6 µm wide and a large orifice with a width of 100 µm is perpendicular to the mainchannel. The electric field is applied through the embedded micro-electrodes to induce the inhomogeneous electric field in the asymmetric orifice region. When passing through the non-uniform electric-field gradient, the Chlorella microalgae cells undergo various dielectrophoretic forces to show different migration behaviors and flow into individual outlets.

Numerical Methods
It can be inferred from Equation (13) that the magnitude of the total DC-DEP forces scales linearly with the diameter of Chlorella sphere and the non-homogeneous electricfield gradient, while the direction of the dielectrophoretic trajectory is dependent on the sign of Chlorella-dependent , . In this way, the size-based sorting of Chlorella is straightforward. In addition, as discussed in Equation (8), the value of , depends on the coverage, thickness, and type of MP-particle coating. If the , 0, the Chlorella is attracted towards the maximum electric-field gradient by the positive DEP forces. By contrast, they are repelled away by negative DEP effects and move away from the highelectric-field area. In this way, the isolation of Chlorella with different MP-particle coatings can be achieved. In this study, a novel DC-DEP manipulation method for the isolation of Chlorella microalgae cells is proposed by applying a relatively low electric field via the triple-orifice-based asymmetric-orifice structure across the whole microchannel, which is shown in Figure 2. This channel consists of three inlet and two outlet channels with a width of 80 µm, connected by a horizontal mainchannel, which is 300 µm in length. All these channels are shifted 45° from the horizontal channel. In this mainchannel, the asymmetric orifices with a triple small orifice are 6 µm wide and a large orifice with a width of 100 µm is perpendicular to the mainchannel. The electric field is applied through the embedded micro-electrodes to induce the inhomogeneous electric field in the asymmetric orifice region. When passing through the non-uniform electric-field gradient, the Chlorella microalgae cells undergo various dielectrophoretic forces to show different migration behaviors and flow into individual outlets. In this work, the following equations and boundary conditions were calculated by utilizing COMSOL 5.4 software, and a numerical investigation into the manipulation and isolation of MP-treated Chlorella microalgae cells in asymmetric-orifice-based microfluidic chip by using DC-DEP was conducted. To induce the non-homogeneous electric-field gradient, the electric field was solved in a stationary solver. To visualize the migration of these microalgae cells, the particle-tracing module was applied to track their trajectories, varying with different DEP effects. To better understand the DC-DEP manipulation of the Chlorella microalgae cells, extensive numerical simulations on the effect of applied electrical voltage, and the PS adsorption coverage and thickness, were analyzed.

Electric Field
The distribution of the electric filed is governed by the Laplace's equation ϕ = V 1 at the small orifice ϕ = 0 V at the large orificê n(∇ϕ) = 0 at channel walls (15) where the electric potential is applied at the inserted micro-electrode pads andn represents the unit normal vector.

Flow Field
The liquid flow inside the microfluidic chip is considered as incompressible laminar flow and governed by Navier-Stokes equation where Equation (16) illustrates the continuity equation and the term of ∂ → u ∂t in Equation (16) is neglected as it is the steady flow. Furthermore, the inertia → u ·∇ → u is also negligible as the liquid is moving at a relatively low velocity in the microchannel. The velocity is described by → u , the density and viscosity of the solution are ρ and µ, respectively, and ∇P demonstrates the gradient of the pressure.
The non-slip boundary condition at the microchannel walls is described by Equation (17). The inlets and outlet of the microchannels are set with specific velocity values. u = u 1 at the inlets P = 0 at the outlets → u = 0 at channel walls (17)

Particle Tracing
To visualize the migration of the Chlorella in the asymmetric-orifice-based DC-DEP microchannel, the trajectories are calculated and coupled with the applied electric field and flow field, whose movement is governed by Newton's second law [36,37] where the net force, including the applied dielectrophoretic force and the drag force, is represented by → F t , and the mass and velocity of the moving Chlorella are described by m p and → v , respectively. The dielectrophoretic force acting on the Chlorella adsorbed with PS microplastic particles is described as where C n = 3P 2 n 1 − 2P n 3 and P n represents the coating coverage. The drag force exerted on the Chlorella in the laminar flow is given by where the density and radius of the Chlorella are demonstrated by ρ p and r, respectively, and the µ represents the dynamic viscosity of the fluid. All the parameters utilized in the numerical study are shown in Table 1.

Simulation of the Electric Field
The numerical simulation of the distribution of the non-homogeneous electric field across the asymmetric orifice was conducted by using COMSOL 5.4. By applying the electric field across the structure of the orifices via the embedded micro-electrode pads, the electric-field gradient is generated, where the small orifice has the strongest non-uniform electric fields. As shown in Figure 3a, the dark-red semicircle, i.e., the non-homogeneous electric-field gradient, is approximately 25 µm in radius. It can be inferred from Equation (1) that the stronger electric field gradient, i.e., the magnitude of the DEP effects, leads to a higher sorting efficiency and resolution. By structuring the asymmetric orifices' geometry to triple pairs, the semicircle is increased to approximately 40 µm (shown in Figure 3b), resulting in an enlarged region of non-homogeneous electric-field gradient and an extension of the time period of the DEP's effects on the targets. Subsequently, the Chlorella adsorbed with PS particles experiences DEP forces, and their trajectory migrations change when passing over this area. microchannel in traditional insulator-based DC-DEP devices. Therefore, the application of a relatively low electrical voltage across the asymmetric-orifice-based microchannel can induce a sufficiently strong non-homogeneous electric-field gradient and prevent the potential Joule heating effect. This allows stronger DEP forces on the particles, enabling the manipulation of smaller particles with higher accuracy and resolution.

Effect of the Applied Voltage
To examine the effect of the non-homogeneous electric field gradient on the migration of 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella adsorbed and coated with 100% PS particles, different electrical voltages were applied at the embedded micro-electrodes through the asymmetric orifices from 5 V to 40 V. In this study, the thickness of the coated layer, i.e., the diameter of the PS particles, is 0.6 µm and the electrical conductivity of the surrounding solution is = 1 × 10 −7 S/m. The separation of the 3-micrometer and 6-microm- In addition, in the proposed triple-asymmetric-orifice-based DC-DEP microfluidic chip, the ∇|E| 2 max calculated is in the order of 10 15 V 2 /m 3 with 5 V employed via the asymmetric orifices over 40 µm between the microelectrodes. Nevertheless, the value of the ∇|E| 2 max is approximately~10 11 -10 15 V 2 /m 3 with 70-1200 V/cm applied through the whole microchannel in traditional insulator-based DC-DEP devices. Therefore, the application of a relatively low electrical voltage across the asymmetric-orifice-based microchannel can induce a sufficiently strong non-homogeneous electric-field gradient and prevent the potential Joule heating effect. This allows stronger DEP forces on the particles, enabling the manipulation of smaller particles with higher accuracy and resolution.

Effect of the Applied Voltage
To examine the effect of the non-homogeneous electric field gradient on the migration of 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella adsorbed and coated with 100% PS particles, different electrical voltages were applied at the embedded micro-electrodes through the asymmetric orifices from 5 V to 40 V. In this study, the thickness of the coated layer, i.e., the diameter of the PS particles, is 0.6 µm and the electrical conductivity of the surrounding solution is σ m = 1 × 10 −7 S/m. The separation of the 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella coated with 100% PS particles varying with the applied non-uniform electric field is shown in Figure 4.

Effect of the Applied Voltage
To examine the effect of the non-homogeneous electric field gradient on the migration of 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella adsorbed and coated with 100% PS particles, different electrical voltages were applied at the embedded micro-electrodes through the asymmetric orifices from 5 V to 40 V. In this study, the thickness of the coated layer, i.e., the diameter of the PS particles, is 0.6 µm and the electrical conductivity of the surrounding solution is = 1 × 10 −7 S/m. The separation of the 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella coated with 100% PS particles varying with the applied non-uniform electric field is shown in Figure 4.  Figure 5, for the Chlorella coated with 100% PS particles, the ( f CM, C ) < 0 and they experienced negative DEP effects. It can be inferred from Equation (13) that the magnitude of the total DC-DEP forces linearly scaled with the diameter of the Chlorella sphere and the non-homogeneous electric-field gradient, leading to increases in the value of the DC-DEP forces with the applied electrical voltages. Therefore, the magnitude of the DC-DEP force exerted on the 6-micrometer was approximately eight times stronger than that on the 3-micrometer Chlorella, resulting in different trajectory migrations. As shown in Figure 4a, when the applied voltage was 5 V, the mixed Chlorella cells flowed together into the outlet D as the migration shifts were small between the large Chlorella and the small Chlorella due to the relatively weak DC-DEP effects. When increasing the voltage to 15 V, the trajectory migrations for the mixture were enlarged but not large enough; subsequently, they continued moving into outlet E. A sufficient level of migration was induced for the mixed large and small Chlorella after they passed through the asymmetric orifices when the applied voltage was 25 volts, and they moved into the individual outlets, D and E, respectively. Therefore, the sorting of the 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella adsorbed and coated with 100% PS particles was achieved. However, when further increasing the applied voltage to 45 V, the large Chlorella and the small Chlorella moved into outlet E together due to the overly strong DC-DEP effects, and the separation could not be achieved. that on the 3-micrometer Chlorella, resulting in different trajectory migrations. As shown in Figure 4a, when the applied voltage was 5 V, the mixed Chlorella cells flowed together into the outlet D as the migration shifts were small between the large Chlorella and the small Chlorella due to the relatively weak DC-DEP effects. When increasing the voltage to 15 V, the trajectory migrations for the mixture were enlarged but not large enough; subsequently, they continued moving into outlet E. A sufficient level of migration was induced for the mixed large and small Chlorella after they passed through the asymmetric orifices when the applied voltage was 25 volts, and they moved into the individual outlets, D and E, respectively. Therefore, the sorting of the 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella adsorbed and coated with 100% PS particles was achieved. However, when further increasing the applied voltage to 45 V, the large Chlorella and the small Chlorella moved into outlet E together due to the overly strong DC-DEP effects, and the separation could not be achieved.

Effect of the PS Adsorption Coverage
The value of 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with five different coverages of PS microplastic particles, i.e., 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100%, as a function of the electrical conductivity of the surrounding solution, is shown in Figure 5. The thickness of the adsorbed PS particles (the diameter of the PS particle) was 0.6 µm. Due to the selection of the specific electrical conductivity of the suspension, the Chlorella with different coating coverages of PS particles demonstrate opposite DEP behaviors, i.e., positive and negative DEP effects, respectively. In this way, the separation of the 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 25% and Figure 5. The CM factor of 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with various different coverage levels of PS particles, which varied with the electrical conductivity of the surrounding medium. The thickness of the PS-particle coating was 0.6 µm.

Effect of the PS Adsorption Coverage
The value of 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with five different coverages of PS microplastic particles, i.e., 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100%, as a function of the electrical conductivity of the surrounding solution, is shown in Figure 5. The thickness of the adsorbed PS particles (the diameter of the PS particle) was 0.6 µm. Due to the selection of the specific electrical conductivity of the suspension, the Chlorella with different coating coverages of PS particles demonstrate opposite DEP behaviors, i.e., positive and negative DEP effects, respectively. In this way, the separation of the 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 25% and 75% PS particles and the isolation of the 3-micrometer Chlorella from the Chlorella fully coated with PS particles experiencing opposite DC-DEP forces, where the selected electrical conductivity of the medium is σ m = 1 × 10 −7 S/m, are shown in Figure 6.
As discussed in Equation (8), the value of Re( f CM, C ) depends on the MP-particlecoating coverage. If the Re( f CM, C ) > 0, the Chlorella are attracted towards the maximum electric-field gradient by the positive DEP forces. By contrast, they are repelled away by negative DEP effects and move away from the high-electric -field area. When the mixture of the 3-micrometer Chlorella and the Chlorella fully coated with PS microplastic particles moved through the small-orifice region, which had the strongest non-homogeneous electricfield gradient (shown in Figure 6a), they demonstrated opposite DC-DEP behaviors, i.e., Re( f CM, C ) ≈ 0.6 for the Chlorella, and they continued to flow into the outlet D after undergoing positive DC-DEP effects, while ( f CM, C ) ≈ −0.5 for the Chlorella fully coated with PS microplastic particles, and they were repelled away from the small orifices by the negative DC-DEP forces and moved into outlet E. Moreover, the mixed Chlorella coated with 25% and 75% PS particles were well separated into outlets D and E when experiencing the positive (Re( f CM, C ) ≈ 0.4) and negative (( f CM, C ) ≈ −0.3) DC-DEP forces, respectively (as shown in Figure 6b).
i.e., , 0.6 for the Chlorella, and they continued to flow into the outlet D after undergoing positive DC-DEP effects, while , −0.5 for the Chlorella fully coated with PS microplastic particles, and they were repelled away from the small orifices by the negative DC-DEP forces and moved into outlet E. Moreover, the mixed Chlorella coated with 25% and 75% PS particles were well separated into outlets D and E when experiencing the positive (

Effect of the PS Adsorption Thickness
The CM factor of the 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 50% and 100% PS-particle coverage but various different PS-particle-coating thicknesses, i.e., diameters of PS particles of 0.2 µm, 0.4 µm, 0.6 µm, 0.8 µm, and 1 µm, varying with the electrical conductivity of the surrounding medium, is shown in Figure 7.

Effect of the PS Adsorption Thickness
The CM factor of the 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 50% and 100% PS-particle coverage but various different PS-particle-coating thicknesses, i.e., diameters of PS particles of 0.2 µm, 0.4 µm, 0.6 µm, 0.8 µm, and 1 µm, varying with the electrical conductivity of the surrounding medium, is shown in Figure 7. i.e., , 0.6 for the Chlorella, and they continued to flow into the outlet D after undergoing positive DC-DEP effects, while , −0.5 for the Chlorella fully coated with PS microplastic particles, and they were repelled away from the small orifices by the negative DC-DEP forces and moved into outlet E. Moreover, the mixed Chlorella coated with 25% and 75% PS particles were well separated into outlets D and E when experiencing the positive (

Effect of the PS Adsorption Thickness
The CM factor of the 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 50% and 100% PS-particle coverage but various different PS-particle-coating thicknesses, i.e., diameters of PS particles of 0.2 µm, 0.4 µm, 0.6 µm, 0.8 µm, and 1 µm, varying with the electrical conductivity of the surrounding medium, is shown in Figure 7.  It can be inferred from Figure 7 that the CM factors for the Chlorella with different PSparticle-coating coverages as a function of the electrical conductivity of the suspension were different, but were essentially identical with different coating thicknesses, i.e., diameters of PS particles. Therefore, Chlorella with different coating thicknesses always display the same DC-DEP behaviors when the given electrical conductivity of the surrounding solution is applied, resulting in a negligible effect of the PS-particle-coating thickness, i.e., the diameters of the PS particles, on their DC-DEP migrations. In this way, the separation of 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 100% PS-particle coverage but with two different PS-particle coating thicknesses, of 0.2 µm and 1 µm, respectively, as a function of the electric voltage applied with the negative DC-DEP forces, is shown in Figure 8. As discussed above, the magnitude of the DC-DEP forces was proportional to the diameters of the Chlorella cells; the DC-DEP effects on the Chlorella with a coating thickness of 1 µm, i.e., with a larger effective diameter, was stronger than that on the Chlorella with the coating thickness of 0.2 µm, i.e., smaller effective diameter, leading to the size-based sorting. As shown in Figure 8c, the successful separation of the Chlorella coated with the 100% PSparticle coverage but two different PS-particle-coating thicknesses, of 0.2 µm and 1 µm, was achieved. of 3-micrometer Chlorella coated with 100% PS-particle coverage but with two different PS-particle coating thicknesses, of 0.2 µm and 1 µm, respectively, as a function of the electric voltage applied with the negative DC-DEP forces, is shown in Figure 8. As discussed above, the magnitude of the DC-DEP forces was proportional to the diameters of the Chlorella cells; the DC-DEP effects on the Chlorella with a coating thickness of 1 µm, i.e., with a larger effective diameter, was stronger than that on the Chlorella with the coating thickness of 0.2 µm, i.e., smaller effective diameter, leading to the size-based sorting. As shown in Figure 8c, the successful separation of the Chlorella coated with the 100% PS-particle coverage but two different PS-particle-coating thicknesses, of 0.2 µm and 1 µm, was achieved.

Conclusions
The dielectrophoretic manipulation and isolation of microplastic-particles-based Chlorella microalgae cells under a DC electric field in a triple-asymmetric-orifice-based microfluidic chip was numerically conducted. To generate stronger DC-DEP effects, a non-homogeneous electric-field gradient was induced by applying the DC electric voltages through triple pairs of asymmetric orifices with three small orifices and one large orifice located on the opposite microchannel wall across the whole channel. In this way,

Conclusions
The dielectrophoretic manipulation and isolation of microplastic-particles-based Chlorella microalgae cells under a DC electric field in a triple-asymmetric-orifice-based microfluidic chip was numerically conducted. To generate stronger DC-DEP effects, a nonhomogeneous electric-field gradient was induced by applying the DC electric voltages through triple pairs of asymmetric orifices with three small orifices and one large orifice located on the opposite microchannel wall across the whole channel. In this way, the magnitudes of the non-uniform electric-field gradient and the corresponding effective region were enhanced, leading to stronger DC-DEP forces and larger migration shifts for the Chlorella cells. To better understand the DC-DEP trajectory of the Chlorella cells adsorbed and coated with microplastic particles, the distribution of the electric-field gradient and the Clausius-Mossotti factors as a function of the electrical conductivity of the surrounding medium were studied. Moreover, the effects of the applied voltage, the PS adsorption coverage and thickness on their DC-DEP behaviors, and migration were numerically investigated. The effect of the PS adsorption thickness of the Chlorella cells on the DC-DEP behaviors can be neglected, but the effect on their trajectory shifts cannot. In addition, the separation of 3-micrometer and 6-micrometer Chlorella coated with 100% PS particles and the isolation of the Chlorella cells from those coated with various coverages and thicknesses of PS particles was successfully achieved. Therefore, the ability to separate mixed Chlorella microalgae-cell populations by adjusting the electrical conductivity of the suspension on the chip identifies the proposed method as a promising technique through which to precisely select Chlorella microalgae cells in complex microalgae-cell populations and remove undesired cells from a target suspension.
Author Contributions: T.G.: methodology, software, writing-review and editing. K.Z. (Kai Zhao): conceptualization, methodology, resources, funding acquisition, writing-original draft, writing-review and editing. J.Z.: formal analysis, writing-review and editing. K.Z. (Kaihuan Zhang): conceptualization, methodology, resources, funding acquisition, writing-original draft, writing-review and editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.