Combining
Wax Printing with Hot Embossing for the
Design of Geometrically Well-Defined Microfluidic Papers
Posted on 2018-12-24 - 00:00
A simple,
efficient, and repeatable combination of wax printing
and hot embossing is reported. This combination yields microfluidic
channels in paper, where fluid transport driven by paper-intrinsic
capillary forces takes place inside the noncompressed areas, whereas
embossed and wax-bonded areas serve as hydrophobic barriers laterally
confining the fluid flow. Lab-made paper sheets first coated with
a hydrophobic wax were hot-embossed with a tailor-made metal stamp.
Both paper-intrinsic (e.g., grammage, fiber type) and paper-extrinsic
parameters (e.g., embossing force) were studied for their influence
on the geometry of the embossed structures and the resulting redistribution
of the wax within the paper matrix. Embossing of wax-printed paper
at temperatures above the wax melting point was completed within 15
s. Cotton linters papers required higher embossing forces than eucalyptus
papers, which can be explained by their different intrinsic mechanical
properties. In summary, both paper-intrinsic and paper-extrinsic parameters
were found to have strong impact on resolution and reproducibility
of the channels. All in all, the approach yields microfluidic channels
in a fast and robust and reproducible manner with comparably low constrains
on the precision of manufacturing parameters, such as embossing time,
force, or temperature. Most importantly, embossing greatly reduces
the lateral spreading of the wax as seen with melting approaches and
therefore allows for a much higher feature density than the latter.
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Postulka, Niels; Striegel, Andreas; Krauße, Marcel; Mager, Dario; Spiehl, Dieter; Meckel, Tobias; et al. (2019). Combining
Wax Printing with Hot Embossing for the
Design of Geometrically Well-Defined Microfluidic Papers. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.8b18133