| Literature DB >> 26855478 |
Drew P Kise1, Michael J Reddish1, R Brian Dyer1.
Abstract
We report on a microfluidic mixer fabrication platform that increases the versatility and flexibility of mixers for biomolecular applications. A sandwich-format design allows the application of multiple spectroscopic probes to the same mixer. A polymer spacer is 'sandwiched' between two transparent windows, creating a closed microfluidic system. The channels of the mixer are defined by regions in the polymer spacer that lack material and therefore the polymer need not be transparent in the spectral region of interest. Suitable window materials such as CaF2 make the device accessible to a wide range of optical probe wavelengths, from the deep UV to the mid-IR. In this study, we use a commercially available 3D printer to print the polymer spacers to apply three different channel designs into the passive, continuous-flow mixer, and integrated them with three different spectroscopic probes. All three spectroscopic probes are applicable to each mixer without further changes. The sandwich-format mixer coupled with cost-effective 3D printed fabrication techniques could increase the applicability and accessibility of microfluidic mixing to intricate kinetic schemes and monitoring chemical synthesis in cases where only one probe technique proves insufficient.Entities:
Keywords: fluorescence; infrared; microfluidics; protein folding; spectroscopy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26855478 PMCID: PMC4737954 DOI: 10.1088/0960-1317/25/12/124002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Micromech Microeng ISSN: 0960-1317 Impact factor: 1.881