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Dive into the research topics where Yannyk Bourquin is active.

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Featured researches published by Yannyk Bourquin.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Shaping acoustic fields as a toolset for microfluidic manipulations in diagnostic technologies

Julien Reboud; Yannyk Bourquin; Rab Wilson; Gurman S. Pall; Meesbah Jiwaji; Andrew R. Pitt; Anne Graham; Andrew P. Waters; Jonathan M. Cooper

Ultrasonics offers the possibility of developing sophisticated fluid manipulation tools in lab-on-a-chip technologies. Here we demonstrate the ability to shape ultrasonic fields by using phononic lattices, patterned on a disposable chip, to carry out the complex sequence of fluidic manipulations required to detect the rodent malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei in blood. To illustrate the different tools that are available to us, we used acoustic fields to produce the required rotational vortices that mechanically lyse both the red blood cells and the parasitic cells present in a drop of blood. This procedure was followed by the amplification of parasitic genomic sequences using different acoustic fields and frequencies to heat the sample and perform a real-time PCR amplification. The system does not require the use of lytic reagents nor enrichment steps, making it suitable for further integration into lab-on-a-chip point-of-care devices. This acoustic sample preparation and PCR enables us to detect ca. 30 parasites in a microliter-sized blood sample, which is the same order of magnitude in sensitivity as lab-based PCR tests. Unlike other lab-on-a-chip methods, where the sample moves through channels, here we use our ability to shape the acoustic fields in a frequency-dependent manner to provide different analytical functions. The methods also provide a clear route toward the integration of PCR to detect pathogens in a single handheld system.


Lab on a Chip | 2010

Tuneable surface acoustic waves for fluid and particle manipulations on disposable chips

Yannyk Bourquin; Julien Reboud; Rab Wilson; Jonathan M. Cooper

We establish a powerful new acoustic technique to programme complex fluidic functions such as droplet movement, merging, mixing and concentration, on a disposable superstrate.


Advanced Materials | 2011

Phononic Crystals for Shaping Fluids

Yannyk Bourquin; Rab Wilson; Yi Zhang; Julien Reboud; Jonathan M. Cooper

Surface acoustic waves (SAWs) generated on piezoelectric materials have been used as a convenient method for microfl uidic manipulation, where microliter volumes of liquids are actuated by their interaction with sound waves. A wide range of fundamental fl uid actuations, including droplet movement, mixing, splitting, nebulization, and centrifugation, have been performed on such a piezoelectric surface. [ 1 , 2 ] Mention of the jetting of a sessile drop from a piezoelectric substrate have been made in reports on other phenomenon, where the propagating SAW is refracted into the liquid and jets a droplet in a direction known as the Rayleigh angle. [ 3 , 4 ] More signifi cantly, it has also been reported that, by using two circular single-phase unidirectional transducers to radiate the SAW, the energy can be focused to deform a drop into an interfacial jet perpendicular to the piezoelectric surface. [ 5 ]


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Rare‐Cell Enrichment by a Rapid, Label‐Free, Ultrasonic Isopycnic Technique for Medical Diagnostics

Yannyk Bourquin; Abeer Syed; Julien Reboud; Lisa C. Ranford-Cartwright; Michael P. Barrett; Jonathan M. Cooper

One significant challenge in medical diagnostics lies in the development of label-free methods to separate different cells within complex biological samples. Here we demonstrate a generic, low-power ultrasonic separation technique, able to enrich different cell types based upon their physical properties. For malaria, we differentiate between infected and non-infected red blood cells in a fingerprick-sized drop of blood. We are able to achieve an enrichment of circulating cells infected by the ring stage of the parasite over nonparasitized red blood cells by between two and three orders of magnitude in less than 3 seconds (enabling detection at parasitemia levels as low as 0.0005 %). In a second example, we also show that our methods can be used to enrich different cell types, concentrating Trypanosoma in blood at very low levels of infection, on disposable, low-cost chips.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Swimming Using Surface Acoustic Waves

Yannyk Bourquin; Jonathan M. Cooper

Microactuation of free standing objects in fluids is currently dominated by the rotary propeller, giving rise to a range of potential applications in the military, aeronautic and biomedical fields. Previously, surface acoustic waves (SAWs) have been shown to be of increasing interest in the field of microfluidics, where the refraction of a SAW into a drop of fluid creates a convective flow, a phenomenon generally known as SAW streaming. We now show how SAWs, generated at microelectronic devices, can be used as an efficient method of propulsion actuated by localised fluid streaming. The direction of the force arising from such streaming is optimal when the devices are maintained at the Rayleigh angle. The technique provides propulsion without any moving parts, and, due to the inherent design of the SAW transducer, enables simple control of the direction of travel.


Microfluidics, BioMEMS, and Medical Microsystems IX | 2011

Phononic fluidics: acoustically activated droplet manipulations

Julien Reboud; Rab Wilson; Yannyk Bourquin; Yi Zhang; Steven L. Neale; Jonathan M. Cooper

Microfluidic systems have faced challenges in handling real samples and the chip interconnection to other instruments. Here we present a simple interface, where surface acoustic waves (SAWs) from a piezoelectric device are coupled into a disposable acoustically responsive microfluidic chip. By manipulating droplets, SAW technologies have already shown their potential in microfluidics, but it has been limited by the need to rely upon mixed signal generation at multiple interdigitated electrode transducers (IDTs) and the problematic resulting reflections, to allow complex fluid operations. Here, a silicon chip was patterned with phononic structures, engineering the acoustic field by using a full band-gap. It was simply coupled to a piezoelectric LiNbO3 wafer, propagating the SAW, via a thin film of water. Contrary to the use of unstructured superstrates, phononic metamaterials allowed precise spatial control of the acoustic energy and hence its interaction with the liquids placed on the surface of the chip, as demonstrated by simulations. We further show that the acoustic frequency influences the interaction between the SAW and the phononic lattice, providing a route to programme complex fluidic manipulation onto the disposable chip. The centrifugation of cells from a blood sample is presented as a more practical demonstration of the potential of phononic crystals to realize diagnostic systems.


Lab on a Chip | 2011

Phononic crystal structures for acoustically driven microfluidic manipulations

Rab Wilson; Julien Reboud; Yannyk Bourquin; Steven L. Neale; Yi Zhang; Jonathan M. Cooper


Lab on a Chip | 2011

Integrated immunoassay using tuneable surface acoustic waves and lensfree detection

Yannyk Bourquin; Julien Reboud; Rab Wilson; Yi Zhang; Jonathan M. Cooper


Lab on a Chip | 2012

Nebulisation on a disposable array structured with phononic lattices

Julien Reboud; Rab Wilson; Yi Zhang; Mohd H. Ismail; Yannyk Bourquin; Jonathan M. Cooper


Archive | 2013

Phonofluidics drug delivery using tunable surface acoustic waves nebulisation with disposable phononic structures

Mohd H. Ismail; Julien Reboud; Rab Wilson; Yannyk Bourquin; Yi Zhang; Jonathan M. Cooper

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Yi Zhang

University of Glasgow

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Anne Graham

John Radcliffe Hospital

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