Faculty of Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, CAME School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Faculty of Engineering, Aerospace Engineering, CAME School, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2021 Feb 3;16(2):e0245206. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0245206. eCollection 2021.
This paper reports a novel, negligible-cost and open-source process for the rapid prototyping of complex microfluidic devices in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) using 3D-printed interconnecting microchannel scaffolds. These single-extrusion scaffolds are designed with interconnecting ends and used to quickly configure complex microfluidic systems before being embedded in PDMS to produce an imprint of the microfluidic configuration. The scaffolds are printed using common Material Extrusion (MEX) 3D printers and the limits, cost & reliability of the process are evaluated. The limits of standard MEX 3D-printing with off-the-shelf printer modifications is shown to achieve a minimum channel cross-section of 100×100 μm. The paper also lays out a protocol for the rapid fabrication of low-cost microfluidic channel moulds from the thermoplastic 3D-printed scaffolds, allowing the manufacture of customisable microfluidic systems without specialist equipment. The morphology of the resulting PDMS microchannels fabricated with the method are characterised and, when applied directly to glass, without plasma surface treatment, are shown to efficiently operate within the typical working pressures of commercial microfluidic devices. The technique is further validated through the demonstration of 2 common microfluidic devices; a fluid-mixer demonstrating the effective interconnecting scaffold design, and a microsphere droplet generator. The minimal cost of manufacture means that a 5000-piece physical library of mix-and-match channel scaffolds (100 μm scale) can be printed for ~$0.50 and made available to researchers and educators who lack access to appropriate technology. This simple yet innovative approach dramatically lowers the threshold for research and education into microfluidics and will make possible the rapid prototyping of point-of-care lab-on-a-chip diagnostic technology that is truly affordable the world over.
本文报道了一种新颖的、低成本的开源方法,可使用 3D 打印互连微通道支架在聚二甲基硅氧烷(PDMS)中快速原型制作复杂的微流控器件。这些单挤出支架设计有互连端,用于在嵌入 PDMS 之前快速配置复杂的微流控系统,以产生微流控配置的印记。支架使用常见的材料挤出(MEX)3D 打印机打印,评估了该过程的限制、成本和可靠性。通过对市售打印机进行修改的标准 MEX 3D 打印的限制,实现了最小通道横截面为 100×100μm。本文还提出了一种从热塑性 3D 打印支架快速制造低成本微流道模具的方案,允许在没有专用设备的情况下制造可定制的微流控系统。通过对使用该方法制造的 PDMS 微通道的形态进行表征,并在不进行等离子体表面处理的情况下直接应用于玻璃,证明其能够在商业微流控设备的典型工作压力下有效地运行。该技术通过演示两种常见的微流控器件进一步得到验证;一个流体混合器展示了有效互连支架的设计,以及一个微球滴生成器。制造的低成本意味着可以打印出成本约为 0.50 美元的 5000 个物理混合通道支架(100μm 级)库,提供给缺乏适当技术的研究人员和教育工作者。这种简单而创新的方法极大地降低了微流控研究和教育的门槛,并将使世界各地真正负担得起的即时护理实验室芯片诊断技术的快速原型制作成为可能。