ANN
ARBOR, Mich.—The counterintuitive rules of physics
at the nanometer scale create several thorny problems
for scientists when they try to fashion three-dimensional
channels in fluid-handling devices.
Now, University of Michigan researchers think they've
solved at least one of these problems of micro- and
nano-fluidic devices by developing a way to push
debris out of the way as they machine tiny tunnels.
Using ultra-fast pulsed lasers to cut materials
submersed in fluids, the researchers have made three-dimensional
microfluidic devices laced with tiny tunnels, less
than a micrometer in diameter, that form completely
clear of debris. The new process can be performed
in glass and other hard materials, making them a
suitable substitute for the soft materials commonly
used in microfluidics, which have many shortcomings,
such as lack of solvent resistance, protein attachment,
leaching, and inability to withstand high pressures.
Removal of debris has been a substantial challenge
for machining micro and nanofluidic devices. It is
very difficult to remove debris mechanically in a
twisting nano-scale tunnel, and chemical etching
processes can alter the shapes of the channels in
undesirable ways, said Alan Hunt, associate professor
of biomedical engineering.
Hunt
and Earnest Hasselbrink, assistant professor of mechanical
engineering and graduate student Kevin Ke, have described
their new process in “Rapidly Prototyped Three Dimensional
Nanofluidic Channel Networks in Glass Substrates,” a
paper in the journal Analytical Chemistry earlier
this month. The paper appeared as an editor's choice
in the journal Science on July 29.
The
team has been making tunnels using a
method of nanoscale machining developed at U-M which
uses short laser blasts to ablate or drill into the
glass. The laser beam is tightly focused to form
a cone of light that passes through the surface of
the glass, and only cuts below the surface where
the beam converges to a focus. The material's surface
remains unchanged. But debris in the newly-drilled
channels remained a problem.
Luck,
good timing, and an elevator ride provided the
researchers with the breakthrough they needed to
get debris out of the tunnels, Hasselbrink
said.
Hasselbrink
and Hunt were discussing the problem of debris
deposition on the surface of materials in the elevator
when colleague Professor Edgar Meyhöfer
casually suggested they try covering the glass with
water before cutting it with the laser. It worked.
“What was initially mysterious was why the tunnels
contained no machining debris” said Hunt. Further
investigation revealed that the drilling caused bubbles
that pushed the debris through the tunnel and out
the mouth, where the bubbles dissipated. In traditional
laser machining, such bubbles could cause damage
to the inside of the tunnel, but because the physical
behavior of bubbles is different during nanoscale
machining, they do not, Hunt said.
The ability to make these small devices with tunnels
at different depths allows fluid streams to cross
without mixing, and enables scientists to pack more
components into a small area.
The new machining method could create very small,
complex, rapid analytical devices inexpensively for
testing new pharmaceutical compounds or quickly diagnosing
diseases. Commercialization opportunities are being
actively pursued in collaboration with the U-M's
office of Technology Transfer.
The
University of Michigan College of Engineering
is ranked among the top engineering schools in the
country. Michigan Engineering boasts one of the largest
engineering research budgets of any public university,
at $135 million for 2004. Michigan Engineering has
11 departments and two NSF Engineering Research Centers.
Within those departments and centers, there is a
special emphasis on research in three emerging areas:
nanotechnology and integrated microsystems; cellular
and molecular biotechnology; and information technology.
Michigan Engineering is seeking to raise $110 million
for capital building projects and program support
in these areas to further research discovery. Michigan
Engineering's goal is to advance academic scholarship
and market cutting edge research to improve public
health and well-being. For more information,
see the Michigan Engineering home page: http://www.engin.umich.edu
Contact: Laura
Bailey
Phone: (734) 647-7087 and (734) 647-1848
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