Abstract

This study proposes a rapid and inexpensive thermocycler that enables rapid heating of samples using a thin glass chip and a cheap chip resistor to overcome the on-site diagnostic limitations of polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Microchip PCR devices have emerged to miniaturize conventional PCR systems and reduce operation time and cost. In general, PCR microchips require a thin-film heater fabricated through a semiconductor process, which is a complicated process, resulting in high costs. Therefore, this investigation substituted a general chip resistor for a thin-film heater. The proposed thermocycler consists of a compact glass microchip of 12.5 mm × 12.5 mm × 2 mm that could hold a 2 μL PCR sample and a surface-mounted chip resistor of 6432 size (6.4 mm × 3.2 mm). Improving heat transfer from the chip resistor heater to the PCR reaction chamber in the microchip was accomplished via the design and fabrication of a three-dimensional chip structure using selective laser-induced etching, a rapid prototyping technique that allowed to be embedded. The fabricated PCR microchip was combined with a thermistor temperature sensor, a blower fan, and a microcontroller. The assembled thermocycler could heat the sample at a maximum rate of 28.8 °C/s per second. When compared with a commercially available PCR apparatus running the same PCR protocol, the total PCR operating time with a DNA sample was reduced by about 20%.

Highlights

  • Published: 21 February 2022Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is an indispensable technology that is used to amplify deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in various fields such as molecular biology, medical science, criminal investigations, and disease diagnosis because of its high selectivity and high sensitivity [1,2,3]

  • A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) microchip with a chip resistor heater was designed, and finite element method (FEM) software was used to simulate the temperature profile of the microchip when heated by the chip resistor heater

  • We proposed a rapid and inexpensive thermocycler that enables rapid heating of samples using a thin glass chip and a cheap chip resistor for a portable microchip-based

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Summary

Introduction

Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is an indispensable technology that is used to amplify deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) in various fields such as molecular biology, medical science, criminal investigations, and disease diagnosis because of its high selectivity and high sensitivity [1,2,3]. This technology in the disease diagnosis has the advantage of detecting a very small amount of target (viruses or bacteria) in the body for early diagnosis.

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