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Solvent immersion imprint lithography: A high-performance, semi-automated procedure
Author(s) -
Shahla Nemati,
Denis Liyu,
Amrah Canul,
Andreas E. Vasdekis
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
biomicrofluidics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.634
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 1932-1058
DOI - 10.1063/1.4979575
Subject(s) - polymer , lithography , nanotechnology , microfluidics , materials science , rapid prototyping , methacrylate , surface modification , computer science , solvent , optofluidics , dissolution , copolymer , chemical engineering , chemistry , optoelectronics , composite material , engineering , organic chemistry
We expand upon our recent, fundamental report on solvent immersion imprint lithography (SIIL) and describe a semi-automated and high-performance procedure for prototyping polymer microfluidics and optofluidics. The SIIL procedure minimizes manual intervention through a cost-effective (∼$200) and easy-to-assemble apparatus. We analyze the procedure's performance specifically for Poly (methyl methacrylate) microsystems and report repeatable polymer imprinting, bonding, and 3D functionalization in less than 5 min, down to 8  μ m resolutions and 1:1 aspect ratios. In comparison to commercial approaches, the modified SIIL procedure enables substantial cost reductions, a 100-fold reduction in imprinting force requirements, as well as a more than 10-fold increase in bonding strength. We attribute these advantages to the directed polymer dissolution that strictly localizes at the polymer-solvent interface, as uniquely offered by SIIL. The described procedure opens new desktop prototyping opportunities, particularly for non-expert users performing live-cell imaging, flow-through catalysis, and on-chip gas detection.

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