4.7 Article

Disposable silicon-glass microfluidic devices: precise, robust and cheap

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 18, Issue 24, Pages 3872-3880

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8lc01109e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  2. E.W.R. Steacie Memorial Fellowship
  3. Canada Research Chair Program

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Si-glass microfluidics have long provided unprecedented precision, robustness and optical clarity. However, chip fabrication is costly (similar to 500 USD per chip) and in practice, devices are not heavily reused. We present a method to reduce the cost-per-chip by two orders of magnitude (similar to 5 USD per chip), rendering Si-glass microfluidics disposable for many applications. The strategy is based on reducing the area of the chip and a whole-chip manifolding strategy that achieves reliable high-pressure high-temperature fluid connectivity. The resulting system was validated at 130 bar and 95 degrees C and demonstrated in both energy and carbon capture applications. We studied heavy oil flooding with brine, polymer, and surfactant polymer solutions and found the surfactant polymer as the most effective solution which recovered similar to 80% of the oil with the least amount of injection while maintaining a relatively uniform displacement front. In a carbon capture application, we measured the dilation of an emerging ionic liquid analog, choline chloride with urea, in gaseous and supercritical CO2. Previously restricted to niche microfluidic applications, the approach here brings the established benefits of Si-glass microfluidics to a broad range of applications.

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