4.7 Article

Room-temperature bonding of glass chips via PTFE-assisted plasma modification for nanofluidic applications

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 23, Issue 12, Pages 2710-2719

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3lc00169e

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In this study, a low-temperature direct bonding technology for nanofluidic devices was developed. It allows glass chips to be bonded at room temperature and channels to be modified prior to bonding using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)-assisted plasma modification. This technology eliminates the need for heating and avoids component denaturation during the bonding process.
Fused-silica glass, as a desirable material with rigidity, biological inertness, and favorable light transmission for nanofluidic devices, should be assembled via low-temperature bonding technology to hermetically seal channels for stable liquid manipulation in extended-nano (10(1)-10(3) nm) space. Confronted with the predicament of localized functionalization of nanofluidic applications (e.g. DNA microarray) with temperature-sensitive structures, the room-temperature direct bonding of glass chips to achieve modification of channels prior to bonding offers a considerably attractive solution to avoid component denaturation during the conventional post-bonding heating process. Therefore, we developed a nano-structure friendly and technically convenient room-temperature (RT, 25 degrees C) glass-glass direct bonding technology using polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)-assisted plasma modification without a requirement for special equipment. Unlike the establishment of chemical functionalities relying on immersion in potent but dangerous chemicals like HF, the fluorine radicals (F*) from PTFE pieces with superior chemical inertness were introduced on glass surfaces via O-2 plasma sputtering and constructed fluorinated silicon oxides on the glass surfaces effectively, eliminating the significant etching effect of HF to protect fine nanostructures. Very strong bonding was obtained at RT with no heating and the high-pressure resistant glass-glass interfaces were evaluated under high-pressure-driven flow conditions up to 2 MPa based on a two-channel liquid introduction system. Moreover, the favorable optical transmittance of the fluorinated bonding interface demonstrated a capacity for high-resolution optical detection or liquid sensing.

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