Monolithic fabrication of electro-fluidic polymer microchips

2009 
Integration of electronic wiring with microfluidic chips is an important process as it allows electrical interactions with the fluidic media, for example required for resistive and capacitive sensing. It is also necessary in order to implement various actuation and control mechanisms such as pumping, electrophoresis and temperature control. Typically electrical wire traces are added to microfabricated fluidic chips using metal deposition processes that are carried out after the fluidic chip has been fabricated. The process for adding the wiring is complicated and is limited to select metals that can be deposited by evaporation or sputtering. We present a single step method for integrating electrical wires into polymer microfluidic chips that are fabricated by a hot embossing process. This process can flexibly embed any kind of commercially available metal wire with a microfluidic chip and the wiring may be integrated to come into surface contact with the fluid or may be embedded in close proximity to (but insulated from)the fluid paths for example for local heating purposes. This method significantly reduces total processing time and is thus a valuable method for wire integration into polymer chips. We demonstrate two applications—a microelectrolysis chip and a heater chip that were fabricated using this methodology. The design, fabrication process and the initial test results are presented.
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