Solid-State Microfluidics with Integrated Thin-Film
Acoustic Sensors
Posted on 2018-07-24 - 00:00
For
point-of-care applications, integrating sensors into a microfluidic
chip is a nontrivial task because conventional detection modules are
bulky and microfluidic chips are small in size and their fabrication
processes are not compatible. In this work, a solid-state microfluidic
chip with on-chip acoustic sensors using standard thin-film technologies
is introduced. The integrated chip is essentially a stack of thin
films on silicon substrate, featuring compact size, electrical input
(fluid control), and electrical output (sensor read-out). These features
all contribute to portability. In addition, by virtue of processing
discrete microdroplets, the chip provides a solution to the performance
degradation bottleneck of acoustic sensors in liquid-phase sensing.
Label-free immunoassays in serum are carried out, and the viability
of the chip is further demonstrated by result comparison with commercial
ELISA in prostate-specific antigen sensing experiments. The solid-state
chip is believed to fit specific applications in personalized diagnostics
and other relevant clinical settings where instrument portability
matters.