4.8 Article

Rapidly prototyped three-dimensional nanofluidic channel networks in glass substrates

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 77, Issue 16, Pages 5083-5088

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac0505167

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [T32 GM145304] Funding Source: Medline

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Microfluidic and nanofluidic technologies have long sought a fast, reliable method to overcome the creative limitations of planar fabrication methods, the resolution limits of lithography, and the materials limitations for fast prototyping. In the present work, we demonstrate direct 3D machining of submicrometer diameter, subsurface fluidic channels in glass, via optical breakdown near critical intensity, using a femtosecond pulsed laser. No postexposure etching or bonding is required; the channel network (or almost any arbitrary-shaped cavity below the surface) is produced directly from art-to-part. The key to this approach is to use very low energy, highly focused, pulses in the presence of liquid. Microbubbles that result from laser energy deposition gently expand and extrude machining debris from the channels. These bubbles are in a highly damped, low Reynolds number regime, implying that surface spalling due to bubble collapse is unimportant. We demonstrate rapid prototyping of three-dimensional jumpers, mixers, and other key components of complex 3D microscale analysis systems in glass substrates.

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