Dynamic capillary systems towards disposable fluid probes

Project: Funded researchFWF - Austrian Science Fund

Project Details

Description

The basis of the proposed project is the investigation of novel polymer materials as major building blocks in capillary microfluidic networks. This comprises new concepts for capillary pumps as well as active and passive controlling elements in the microfluidic network. The aim is, to investigate dynamic capillary networks, where all actions necessary to supply and flush a reaction- or sensor-chamber like pumping, valving, and synchronization can be controlled in a direct and dynamic manner by means of a feedback control of flow properties. New soft polymer materials that became available recently have proved their ability to induce large changes in the thickness of the material, for example by the converse piezoelectric effect in cellular polymers, and complex three dimensional actuation modes, for example by Maxwell stresses in elastomers. Though these materials have been applied in a variety of transducers, little work yet has been devoted towards their use in actively controlled microfluidic devices. In the course of the project, piezoelectric polymer foams and actuating elastomers will thoroughly be examined for the utilization as controlling elements and actuators in microfluidic networks. A combination of surface (pre-) modification techniques and geometric changes of the channel diameter, dynamically controlled by the use of electroactive polymer actuators, will be employed to modify the capillary force and hence to control fluid flow through the microfluidic network. Open cell polymer foams will be explored for the use as capillary pumps. By adjusting the surface energy of the open cell foam and integrating a heating element underneath, it could serve as a dynamic controllable microfluidic pump. A fast feedback control of flow properties will be realized by implementation of flow velocity sensors in the fluid channel. Specifically developed control and read out electronics will allow direct and dynamic steering of flow properties...
StatusFinished
Effective start/end date01.03.200831.03.2012

Fields of science

  • 203017 Micromechanics
  • 202028 Microelectronics
  • 202019 High frequency engineering
  • 202027 Mechatronics
  • 202 Electrical Engineering, Electronics, Information Engineering
  • 202037 Signal processing
  • 502058 Digital transformation
  • 202036 Sensor systems
  • 202021 Industrial electronics

JKU Focus areas

  • Digital Transformation