Adhesive rolling of nanoparticles in a lateral flow inspired from diagnostics of COVID-19

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eml.2021.101239Get rights and content

Abstract

Due to the lack of therapeutics and vaccines, diagnostics of COVID-19 emerges as one of the primary tools for controlling the spread of SARS-COV-2. Here we aim to develop a theoretical model to study the detection process of SARS-COV-2 in lateral flow device (LFD), which can achieve rapid antigen diagnostic tests. The LFD is modeled as the adhesion of a spherical nanoparticle (NP) coated with ligands on the surface, mimicking the SARS-COV-2, on an infinite substrate distributed with receptors under a simple shear flow. The adhesive behaviors of NPs in the LFD are governed by the ligand–receptor binding (LRB) and local hydrodynamics. Through energy balance analysis, three types of motion are predicted: (i) firm-adhesion (FA); (ii) adhesive-rolling (AR); and (iii) free-rolling (FR), which correspond to LRB-dominated, LRB-hydrodynamics-competed, and hydrodynamics-dominated regimes, respectively. The transitions of FA-to-AR and AR-to-FR are found to be triggered by overcoming LRB barrier and saturation of LRB torque, respectively. Most importantly, in the AR regime, the smaller NPs can move faster than their larger counterparts, induced by the LRB effect that depends on the radius R of NPs. In addition, a scaling law is found in the AR regime that vγ̇Rα (rolling velocity v and shear rate γ̇), with an approximate scaling factor α0.2±0.05 identified through fitting both theoretical and numerical results. The scaling factor emerges from the energy-based stochastic LRB model, and is confirmed to be universal by examining selections of different LRB model parameters. This size-dependent rolling behavior under the control of flow strength may provide the theoretical guidance for designing efficient LFD in detecting infectious disease.

Keywords

COVID-19
Diagnostics
Micro-/nano-fluid dynamics
Nanoparticle adhesion

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