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A Solid‐State Hard Microfluidic–Nanopore Biosensor with Multilayer Fluidics and On‐Chip Bioassay/Purification Chamber
Author(s) -
Varongchayakul Nitinun,
Hersey Joseph S.,
Squires Allison,
Meller Amit,
Grinstaff Mark W.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201804182
Subject(s) - nanopore , microfluidics , materials science , fluidics , nanotechnology , biosensor , solid state , lab on a chip , optoelectronics , electrical engineering , chemistry , engineering
Solid‐state nanopores are an emerging biosensor for nucleic acid and protein characterization. For use in a clinical setting, solid‐state nanopore sensing requires sample preparation and purification, fluid handling, a heating element, electrical noise insulators, and an electrical readout detector, all of which hamper its translation to a point‐of‐care diagnostic device. A stand‐alone microfluidic‐based nanopore device is described that combines a bioassay reaction/purification chamber with a solid‐state nanopore sensor. The microfluidic device is composed of the high‐temperature/solvent resistance Zeonex plastic, formed via micromachining and heat bonding, enabling the use of both a heat regulator and a magnetic controller. Fluid control through the microfluidic channels and chambers is controlled via fluid port selector valves and allows up to eight different solutions. Electrical noise measurements and DNA translocation experiments demonstrate the integrity of the device, with performance comparable to a conventional stand‐alone nanopore setup. However, the microfluidic–nanopore setup is superior in terms of ease of use. To showcase the utility of the device, single molecule detection of a DNA polymerase chain reaction product, after magnetic bead DNA separation, is accomplished on‐chip.