• Title/Summary/Keyword: Microfluidic Bench

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Electrical and Fluidic Characterization of Microelectrofluidic Bench Fabricated Using UV-curable Polymer (UV경화성 폴리머를 이용한 미소유체 통합접속 벤치 개발 및 전기/유체적 특성평가)

  • Youn, Se-Chan;Jin, Young-Hyun;Cho, Young-Ho
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.36 no.5
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    • pp.475-479
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    • 2012
  • We present a novel polymer fabrication process involving direct UV patterning of a hyperbranched polymer, AEO3000. Compared to PDMS, which is the most widely used polymer in bioMEMS devices, the present polymer has advantages with regard to electrode integration and fast fabrication. We designed a four-chip microelectrofluidic bench having three electrical pads and two fluidic I/O ports. We integrated a microfluidic mixer and a cell separator on the bench to characterize the interconnection performance and sample manipulation. Electrical and fluidic characterization of the microfluidic bench was performed. The measured electrical contact resistance was $0.75{\pm}0.44{\Omega}$, which is small enough for electrical applications, and the pressure drop was 8.3 kPa, which was 39.3% of the value in the tubing method. By performing yeast mixing and a separation test in the integrated module on the bench, we successfully showed that the interconnected chips could be used for bio-sample manipulation.

Highly Sensitive Biological Analysis Using Optical Microfluidic Sensor

  • Lee, Sang-Yeop;Chen, Ling-Xin;Choo, Jae-Bum;Lee, Eun-Kyu;Lee, Sang-Hoon
    • Journal of the Optical Society of Korea
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    • v.10 no.3
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    • pp.130-142
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    • 2006
  • Lab-on-a-chip technology is attracting great interest because the miniaturization of reaction systems offers practical advantages over classical bench-top chemical systems. Rapid mixing of the fluids flowing through a microchannel is very important for various applications of microfluidic systems. In addition, highly sensitive on-chip detection techniques are essential for the in situ monitoring of chemical reactions because the detection volume in a channel is extremely small. Recently, a confocal surface enhanced Raman spectroscopic (SERS) technique, for the highly sensitive biological analysis in a microfluidic sensor, has been developed in our research group. Here, a highly precise quantitative measurement can be obtained if continuous flow and homogeneous mixing condition between analytes and silver nano-colloids are maintained. Recently, we also reported a new analytical method of DNA hybridization involving a PDMS microfluidic sensor using fluorescence energy transfer (FRET). This method overcomes many of the drawbacks of microarray chips, such as long hybridization times and inconvenient immobilization procedures. In this paper, our recent applications of the confocal Raman/fluorescence microscopic technology to a highly sensitive lab-on-a-chip detection will be reviewed.