4.6 Article

Piezoresistive Conductive Microfluidic Membranes for Low-Cost On-Chip Pressure and Flow Sensing

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22041489

Keywords

microfluidics; impedance spectroscopy; pressure sensor

Funding

  1. NASA [80NSSC19K1401]
  2. NSF [CBET 1351253]

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The field of microfluidics has gained significant attention in the past two decades, with an increasing demand for low-cost, precise, and real-time pressure and flow sensors. Traditional commercial solutions are expensive and bulky, leading to the development of a new inexpensive and easy-to-integrate sensor for microfluidic applications.
Over the last two decades, the field of microfluidics has received significant attention from both academia and industry. Each year, researchers report thousands of new prototype devices for use in a broad range of environmental, pharmaceutical, and biomedical engineering applications. While lab-on-a-chip fabrication costs have continued to decrease, the hardware required for monitoring fluid flows within the microfluidic devices themselves remains expensive and often cost-prohibitive for researchers interested in starting a microfluidics project. As microfluidic devices become capable of handling complex fluidic systems, low-cost, precise, and real-time pressure and flow rate measurement capabilities have become increasingly important. While many labs use commercial platforms and sensors, these solutions can often cost thousands of dollars and can be too bulky for on-chip use. Here we present a new inexpensive and easy-to-use piezoresistive pressure and flow sensor that can be easily integrated into existing on-chip microfluidic channels. The sensor consists of PDMS-carbon black conductive membranes and uses an impedance analyzer to measure impedance changes due to fluid pressure. The sensor costs several orders of magnitude less than existing commercial platforms and can monitor local fluid pressures and calculate flow rates based on the pressure gradient.

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