Overview
2020 witnessed an increased interest in single-cell research and characterization methods. Electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) is a technique that guarantees fast throughput and label-free sensing so that it can be used to characterize electrical properties, size, or morphology of cells in microfluidic devices. Fluigent and Zurich Instruments drew on their expertise to propose a complete solution for EIS in microfluidics. In this webinar, we present an EIS system consisting of a lock-in amplifier and microfluidic flow controllers and put it to work on detecting microbeads and water-in-oil droplets. What you will learn
Discover a new method for double emulsion production:
- How EIS helps in cell research
- The functioning principle of EIS
- Introduction of our EIS microfluidic platform, including
- System implementation and actuation (video)
- Experimental results for microparticles and droplet detection (video)
- Examples of our systems used in research laboratories
Speakers: