Affiliation:
1. Biomedical Engineering Department McGill University Montreal QC H3A 0G1 Canada
2. McGill Genome Centre McGill University Montreal H3A 0G1 Canada
Abstract
AbstractDigital manufacturing (DM) holds great potential for microfluidics, but requirements for embedded conduits and high resolution beyond the capability of common manufacturing equipment, and microfluidic systems' dependence on peripheralshave limited its adoption. Capillaric circuits (CCs) are structurally encoded, self‐contained microfluidic systems that operate and self‐fill via precisely tailored hydrophilicity. CCs are heretofore hydrophilized in a plasma chamber, but which offers only transient hydrophilicity, lacks reproducibility, and limits CC design to open surface channels subsequently sealed with tape. Here, the additive DM of monolithic, fully functional, and intrinsically hydrophilic CCs is reported. CCs are 3D printed with commonly available light‐engine‐based 3D printers using poly(ethylene glycol)diacrylate‐based ink co‐polymerized with hydrophilic acrylic acid crosslinkers and optimized for hydrophilicity and printability. A new, robust capillary valve design and embedded conduits with circular cross‐sections that prevent bubble trapping are presented, interwoven circuit architectures created, and CC use illustrated with an immunoassay. Finally, the external paper capillary pumps are eliminated by directly embedding the capillary pump in the chip as a porous gyroid structure, realizing fully functional, monolithic CCs. Thence, a digital file can be made into a CC by commonly available 3D printers in less than 30 min enabling low‐cost, distributed DM of fully functional ready‐to‐use microfluidic systems.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science
Cited by
10 articles.
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