Abstract

This paper presents a novel concept for the co-design of microwave heaters and microfluidic channels for sub-microliter volumes in continuous flow microfluidics. Based on the novel co-design concept, two types of heaters are presented, co-designed and manufactured in high-resistivity silicon-glass technology, resulting in a building block for consumable and mass-producible micro total analysis systems. Resonant and non-resonant co-planar waveguide transmission line heaters are investigated for heating of sub-micro-liter liquid volumes in a channel section at 25 GHz. The heating rates of 16 and 24 °C/s are obtained with power levels of 32 dBm for the through line and the open-ended line microwave heater, respectively. The heating uniformity of developed devices is evaluated with a Rhodamine B and deionized water mixture on a micrometer scale using the microwave-optical measurement setup. Measurement results showed a good agreement with simulations and demonstrated the potential of microwave heating for microfluidics.

Highlights

  • This paper presents a novel concept for the co-design of microwave heaters and microfluidic channels for sub-microliter volumes in continuous flow microfluidics

  • According to the microwave design in COMSOL Multiphysics, the open-ended line microwave heater (OELMH) dissipates more power in the microfluidic channel than the through line microwave heater (TLMH), which is confirmed by microwave

  • According to the microwave design in COMSOL Multiphysics, the OELMH dissipates more power in the microfluidic channel than the TLMH, which is confirmed by microwave measurements—the TLMH dissipates 37% of the input power, while the OELMH dissipates 51%

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Summary

Introduction

Liquid filtering and particle separation are achieved using microfluidic filters with an array of pillars [2], while signal detection to evaluate reactions is done using optical [3] or electrical devices [4,5,6]. Temperature control is achieved utilizing contact-based heating devices [7]. The traditional heaters perform adequately if thermal runaway to the whole fluidic device is not a limiting factor, and the substrate material of the fluidic chip can conduct heat sufficiently well. If one of these two factors cannot be respected, a different heating technique is required

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