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Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana
Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Garth J. Simpson, Dept. of Chemistry, Purdue University, 560 Oval Dr., West Lafayette, IN 47907. Tel.: 765-496-3054; Fax: 765-494-0239; E-mail: gsimpson{at}purdue.edu.
Dielectrophoretic force microscopy (DEPFM) and spectroscopy have been performed on individual intact surface-immobilized mammalian red blood cells. Dielectrophoretic force spectra were obtained in situ in
125 ms and could be acquired over a region comparable in dimension to the effective diameter of a scanning probe microscopy tip. Good agreement was observed between the measured dielectrophoretic spectra and predictions using a single-shell cell model. In addition to allowing for highly localized dielectric characterization, DEPFM provided a simple means for noncontact imaging of mammalian blood cells under aqueous conditions. These studies demonstrate the feasibility of using DEPFM to monitor localized changes in membrane capacitance in real time with high spatial resolution on immobilized cells, complementing previous studies of mobile whole cells and cell suspensions.
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