4.7 Article

Print your own membrane: direct rapid prototyping of polydimethylsiloxane

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 14, Issue 15, Pages 2610-2613

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c4lc00320a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Alexander-von-Humboldt Professorship
  2. EU
  3. federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia [EFRE 30 00 883 02]
  4. I3TM Seed Fund Program
  5. EnvisionTEC GmbH

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Polydimethylsiloxane is a translucent and biologically inert silicone material used in sealants, biomedical implants and microscale lab-on-a-chip devices. Furthermore, in membrane technology, polydimethylsiloxane represents a material for separation barriers as it has high permeabilities for various gases. The facile handling of two component formulations with a silicone base material, a catalyst and a small molecular weight crosslinker makes it widely applicable for soft-lithographic replication of two-dimensional device geometries, such as microfluidic chips or micro-contact stamps. Here, we develop a new technique to directly print polydimethylsiloxane in a rapid prototyping device, circumventing the need for masks or sacrificial mold production. We create a three-dimensional polydimethylsiloxane membrane for gas-liquid-contacting based on a Schwarz-P triple-periodic minimal-surface, which is inaccessible with common machining techniques. Direct 3D-printing of polydimethylsiloxane enables rapid production of novel chip geometries for a manifold of lab-on-a-chip applications.

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