“…Many of these technologies belong to a class of separations known as a field-flow fractionation (FFF), where suspended particles (in a broad sense, including solid particles, fluid droplets, microcapsules or cells, typically of radius a = 1 − 5 µm) migrating in a microchannel are displaced perpendicular to the direction of flow under the action of external (gravity, electric, magnetic, etc) cross fields. 6,7 In the conventional FFF the external vertical force is balanced by the so-called "hydrodynamic wall-induced lift force". As a result, particles of different size, shape, density and/or surface properties migrate forward by retaining at equilibrium distances, δ , from the wall, which leads to their spreading and batch sorting in the flow direction.…”