4.6 Article

A Non-Sacrificial 3D Printing Process for Fabricating Integrated Micro/Mesoscale Molds

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi14071363

Keywords

microfluidics; mold fabrication; 3D printing; micro; mesoscale molds

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Three-dimensional printing technology is used in microfluidic mold fabrication for its advantages such as design freedom, speed, and low-cost. In this paper, we propose a non-sacrificial approach using Stereolithography (SLA) printers to assemble modular microfluidic molds, which simplifies the mold fabrication process and addresses the limitations in fabricating complex and time-consuming micro/mesoscale devices. The paper discusses the process flow, optimization of print time and feature resolution, alignments of modular devices, and the advantages and limitations of the proposed technique.
Three-dimensional printing technology has been implemented in microfluidic mold fabrication due to its freedom of design, speed, and low-cost fabrication. To facilitate mold fabrication processes and avoid the complexities of the soft lithography technique, we offer a non-sacrificial approach to fabricate microscale features along with mesoscale features using Stereolithography (SLA) printers to assemble a modular microfluidic mold. This helps with addressing an existing limitation with fabricating complex and time-consuming micro/mesoscale devices. The process flow, optimization of print time and feature resolution, alignments of modular devices, and the advantages and limitations with the offered technique are discussed in this paper.

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