Literature DB >> 15167806

Printed circuit technology for fabrication of plastic-based microfluidic devices.

Arjun P Sudarsan1, Victor M Ugaz.   

Abstract

One of the primary advantages of using plastic-based substrates for microfluidic systems is the ease with which devices can be fabricated with minimal dependence on specialized laboratory equipment. These devices are often produced using soft lithography techniques to cast replicas of a rigid mold or master incorporating a negative image of the desired surface structures. Conventional photolithographic micromachining processes are typically used to construct these masters in either thick photoresist, etched silicon, or etched glass substrates. The speed at which new masters can be produced using these techniques, however, can be relatively slow and often limits the rate at which new device designs can be built and tested. In this paper, we show that inexpensive photosensitized copper clad circuit board substrates can be employed to produce master molds using conventional printed circuit technology. This process offers the benefits of parallel fabrication associated with photolithography without the need for cleanroom facilities, thereby providing a degree of speed and simplicity that allows microfluidic master molds with well-defined and reproducible structural features to be constructed in approximately 30 min in any laboratory. Precise control of channel heights ranging from 15 to 120 microm can be easily achieved through selection of the appropriate copper layer thickness, and channel widths as small as 50 microm can be reproducibly obtained. We use these masters to produce a variety of plastic-based microfluidic channel networks and demonstrate their suitability for DNA electrophoresis and microfluidic mixing studies.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15167806     DOI: 10.1021/ac035411n

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  5 in total

1.  Benchtop fabrication of PDMS microstructures by an unconventional photolithographic method.

Authors:  Chang Mo Hwang; Woo Young Sim; Seung Hwan Lee; Amir M Foudeh; Hojae Bae; Sang-Hoon Lee; Ali Khademhosseini
Journal:  Biofabrication       Date:  2010-09-24       Impact factor: 9.954

2.  Plastic versus glass support for an immunoassay on metal-coated surfaces in optically dense samples utilizing directional surface plasmon-coupled emission.

Authors:  Evgenia G Matveeva; Ignacy Gryczynski; Joanna Malicka; Zygmunt Gryczynski; Ewa Goldys; Joseph Howe; Klaus W Berndt; Joseph R Lakowicz
Journal:  J Fluoresc       Date:  2005-11       Impact factor: 2.217

3.  Multivortex micromixing.

Authors:  Arjun P Sudarsan; Victor M Ugaz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2006-04-27       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  A soft-polymer piezoelectric bimorph cantilever-actuated peristaltic micropump.

Authors:  Neil J Graf; Michael T Bowser
Journal:  Lab Chip       Date:  2008-08-28       Impact factor: 6.799

5.  Study on the Optimum Cutting Parameters of an Aluminum Mold for Effective Bonding Strength of a PDMS Microfluidic Device.

Authors:  Caffiyar Mohamed Yousuff; Mohd Danish; Eric Tatt Wei Ho; Ismail Hussain Kamal Basha; Nor Hisham B Hamid
Journal:  Micromachines (Basel)       Date:  2017-08-22       Impact factor: 2.891

  5 in total

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