Izenburua
Optimizing Polymer Lab-on-Chip Platforms for Ultrasonic Manipulation: Influence of the SubstrateEgilea (beste erakunde batekoa)
Beste instituzio
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC)Ikerlan
Hospital General Universitario de Elche
Bertsioa
Bertsio argitaratua
Eskubideak
© 2015 by the authors; licensee MDPISarbidea
Sarbide irekiaArgitaratzailearen bertsioa
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi6050574Non argitaratua
Micromachines Vol. 6. Nº 5. Pp. 574-591. Published 7 May,Lehenengo orria
574Azken orria
591Argitaratzailea
MDPIGako-hitzak
lab-on-chip
ultrasonic manipulation
polymeric resonators
acoustic tweezers ... [+]
ultrasonic manipulation
polymeric resonators
acoustic tweezers ... [+]
lab-on-chip
ultrasonic manipulation
polymeric resonators
acoustic tweezers
particle enrichment [-]
ultrasonic manipulation
polymeric resonators
acoustic tweezers
particle enrichment [-]
Laburpena
The choice of substrate material in a chip that combines ultrasound with microfluidics for handling biological and synthetic microparticles can have a profound effect on the performance of the device. ... [+]
The choice of substrate material in a chip that combines ultrasound with microfluidics for handling biological and synthetic microparticles can have a profound effect on the performance of the device. This is due to the high surface-to-volume ratio that exists within such small structures and acquires particular relevance in polymer-based resonators with 3D standing waves. This paper presents three chips developed to perform particle flow-through separation by ultrasound based on a polymeric SU-8 layer containing channelization over three different substrates: Polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA); Pyrex; and a cracked PMMA composite-like structure. Through direct observations of polystyrene microbeads inside the channel, the three checked chips exhibit their potential as disposable continuous concentration devices with different spatial pressure patterns at frequencies of resonance close to 1 Mhz. Chips with Pyrex and cracked PMMA substrates show restrictions on the number of pressure nodes established in the channel associated with the inhibition of 3D modes in the solid structure. The glass-substrate chip presents some advantages associated with lower energy requirements to collect particles. According to the results, the use of polymer-based chips with rigid substrates can be advantageous for applications that require short treatment times (clinical tests handling human samples) and low-cost fabrication. [-]
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