4.6 Article

Piezoelectric Silicon Micropump for Drug Delivery Applications

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app11178008

Keywords

micropump; piezoelectric diaphragm pump; drug delivery; microdosing; patch pump; insulin delivery

Funding

  1. Electronic Components and Systems for European Leadership Joint Undertaking (ECSEL JU)
  2. European Union's H2020 Framework Program (H2020/2014-2020) and National Authorities [H2020-ECSEL-2019-IA-876190]

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Subcutaneous injection is crucial for treating diseases, especially with automated dosing for better results. Research on MEMS-based drug delivery devices like a 5 x 5 mm² silicon micropump shows high dosing precision and repeatability, laying the foundation for extremely miniaturized patch pumps.
Subcutaneous injection is crucial for the treatment of many diseases. Especially for regular or continuous injections, automated dosing is beneficial. However, existing devices are large, uncomfortable, visible under clothing, or interfere with physical activity. Thus, the development of small, energy efficient and reliable patch pumps or implantable systems is necessary and research on microelectromechanical system (MEMS) based drug delivery devices has gained increasing interest. However, the requirements of medical applications are challenging and especially the dosing precision and reliability of MEMS pumps are not yet sufficiently evaluated. To enable further miniaturization, we propose a precise 5 x 5 mm(2) silicon micropump. Detailed experimental evaluation of ten pumps proves a backpressure capability with air of 12.5 +/- 0.8 kPa, which indicates the ability to transport bubbles. The maximal water flow rate is 74 +/- 6 mu L/min and the pumps' average blocking pressure is 51 kPa. The evaluation of the dosing precision for bolus deliveries with water and insulin shows a high repeatability of dosed package volumes. The pumps show a mean standard deviation of only 0.02 mg for 0.5 mg packages, and therefore, stay below the generally accepted 5% deviation, even for this extremely small amount. The high precision enables the combination with higher concentrated medication and is the foundation for the development of an extremely miniaturized patch pump.

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