“…[1â3] Droplet microfluidics has emerged as a single cell sorting technology which offers several advantages over existing large-scale technologies like capillary electrophoresis, flow cytometry, and mass cytometry in terms of its reduced reagent costs, ease-of-use, and compatibility with fluorescent microscopy. [4, 5] Fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) is a commercialized flow cytometry technique, capable of simultaneous quantification up to 20 parameters in single cells based on specific light scattering and fluorescent characteristics of each cell (called fluorescence-cell barcoding). [6, 7] However, flow cytometry is often limited by its need for large sample size, the cost and size of the instrument,[8] and the use of rapid flow in the system which, when coupled with non-specific surface markers, can negatively affect cell viability.…”