Fabrication of Tunable Silk Materials Through Microfluidic Mixers

Author(s):  
Joseph R. Nalbach ◽  
Dave Jao ◽  
Douglas G. Petro ◽  
Kyle M. Raudenbush ◽  
Shibbir Ahmad ◽  
...  

A common method to precisely control the material properties is to evenly distribute functional nanomaterials within the substrate. For example, it is possible to mix a silk solution and nanomaterials together to form one tuned silk sample. However, the nanomaterials are likely to aggregate in the traditional manual mixing processes. Here we report a pilot study of utilizing specific microfluidic mixing designs to achieve a uniform nanomaterial distribution with minimal aggregation. Mixing patterns are created based on classic designs and then validated by experimental results. The devices are fabricated on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) using 3D printed molds and soft lithography for rapid replication. The initial mixing performance is validated through the mixing of two solutions with colored dyes. The microfluidic mixer designs are further analyzed by creating silk-based film samples. The cured film is inspected with scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to reveal the distribution uniformity of the dye particles within the silk material matrix. Our preliminary results show that the microfluidic mixing produces uniform distribution of dye particles. Because the microfluidic device can be used as a continuous mixing tool, we believe it will provide a powerful platform for better preparation of silk materials. By using different types of nanomaterials such as graphite (demonstrated in this study), graphene, carbon nanotubes, and magnetic nanoparticles, the resulting silk samples can be fine-tuned with desired electrical, mechanical, and magnetic properties.

Author(s):  
Jeffrey T. Coleman ◽  
Jonathan McKechnie ◽  
David Sinton

Rapid electric field switching is an established microfluidic mixing strategy for electrokinetic flows. Many such microfluidic mixers are variations on the t- or y-channel geometry. In these configurations, rapid switching of the electric field can greatly improve initial mixing over that achieved with static-field mixing. Due to a fundamental lack of symmetry, however, these strategies suffer from lingering cross-channel concentration gradients which delay complete mixing of the fluid stream. Presented here is a field switching microfluidic mixing strategy which utilizes a symmetric sequential injector and an expansion chamber to achieve rapid and effectively complete microfluidic mixing. The three-inlet symmetric injector sequentially interlaces the two dissimilar incoming solutions. Just downstream of the injector, the sequence enters an expansion chamber and increased axial diffusion results in rapid mixing. The completely mixed solution is refocused into the outlet stream. The microfluidic chips are designed such that only the minimum number of independent fluid reservoirs is required. Chips are manufactured in polydimethylsiloxane using established soft-lithography based microfabrication methods. Fluorescence microscopy is employed to analyze, quantify and demonstrate the effectiveness of this mixing strategy, and determine a preferred operating frequency range. The microfluidic chip design is based on the findings of a recent numerical modelling based work that demonstrates the sequential injection micromixing concept.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serhat Sevli ◽  
not provided C. Yunus Sahan

Microfluidics materials are of various types and application-specific. PDMS is one of the most preferred and cost-effective solutions for research and low-volume manufacturing. After having the mold, PDMS replicas are generated by a technique called soft-lithography. This protocol describes the preparation of PDMS microchannels using SU8 molds, 3D Printed resin molds, and/or metal molds by the soft lithography technique, SLA printing, or CNC machining.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serhat Sevli ◽  
not provided C. Yunus Sahan

Microfluidics materials are of various types and application-specific. PDMS is one of the most preferred and cost-effective solutions for research and low-volume manufacturing. After having the mold, PDMS replicas are generated by a technique called soft-lithography. This protocol describes the preparation of PDMS microchannels using SU8 molds, 3D Printed resin molds, and/or metal molds by the soft lithography technique, SLA printing, or CNC machining.


Micromachines ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 695 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunxia Wang ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Zheng Qiao ◽  
Wanjun Wang

Homogeneous mixing of microscopic volume fluids at low Reynolds number is of great significance for a wide range of chemical, biological, and medical applications. An efficient jet mixer with arrays of micronozzles was designed and fabricated using additive manufacturing (three-dimensional (3D) printing) technology for applications in centrifugal microfluidic platforms. The contact surface of miscible liquids was enhanced significantly by impinging plumes from two opposite arrays of micronozzles to improve mixing performance. The mixing efficiency was evaluated and compared with the commonly used Y-shaped micromixer. Effective mixing in the jet mixer was achieved within a very short timescale (3s). This 3D printed jet mixer has great potential to be implemented in applications by being incorporated into multifarious 3D printing devices in microfluidic platforms.


2005 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 180-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
T.M. Floyd-Smith ◽  
J.P. Golden ◽  
P.B. Howell ◽  
F.S. Ligler

2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (05n06) ◽  
pp. 1660013
Author(s):  
Yammani Venkat Subba Rao ◽  
Aravinda Narayanan Raghavan ◽  
Meenakshi Viswanathan

The ability to create patterns of piezo responsive material on smooth substrate is an important method to develop efficient microfluidic mixers. This paper reports the fabrication of Poly vinylidene fluoride microfilms using spin-coating on smooth glass surface. The suitable crystalline phases, surface morphology and microstructural properties of the PVDF films have been investigated. We found that films of average thickness 10[Formula: see text][Formula: see text]m, had average roughness of 0.13[Formula: see text][Formula: see text]m. These PVDF films are useful in microfluidic mixer applications.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (16) ◽  
pp. 2070088
Author(s):  
Janko Kajtez ◽  
Sebastian Buchmann ◽  
Shashank Vasudevan ◽  
Marcella Birtele ◽  
Stefano Rocchetti ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 57 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takao YASUI ◽  
Yusuke OMOTO ◽  
Keiko OSATO ◽  
Noritada KAJI ◽  
Norikazu SUZUKI ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
N. Paya ◽  
T. Dankovic ◽  
A. Feinerman

Mixing is often crucial to the operation of various microfluidic devices. And the most common objective is rapid mixing between two initially segregated fluid streams in a minimal amount of space. In microfluidic flows characterized by incompressibility and low Reynolds number, however, turbulence is almost entirely absent and mixing generally relies on diffusion. Therefore, based on the properties of the fluids involved, it can take impractically long to achieve high mixing efficiency in some cases. To resolve this problem, this paper demonstrates a novel compliant micromixer made of thermoplastic films for lab-on-a-chip applications. The microfluidic mixer utilizes self-rotation effects to achieve high mixing efficiency at Reynolds numbers below 100. In addition, a possible design is suggested for a thermoplastic voltage-actuated micromixer which can lead to even better mixing performance at Reynolds numbers below 1.


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