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Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics

Three-dimensional (3D) printing will create a revolution in the field of microfluidics due to fabricating truly three-dimensional channels in a single step. During the 3D-printing process, sacrificial materials are usually needed to fulfill channels inside and support the printed chip outside. Remov...

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Autores principales: Yin, Pengju, Hu, Bo, Yi, Langlang, Xiao, Chun, Cao, Xu, Zhao, Lei, Shi, Hongyan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6082279/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30424260
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi9070327
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author Yin, Pengju
Hu, Bo
Yi, Langlang
Xiao, Chun
Cao, Xu
Zhao, Lei
Shi, Hongyan
author_facet Yin, Pengju
Hu, Bo
Yi, Langlang
Xiao, Chun
Cao, Xu
Zhao, Lei
Shi, Hongyan
author_sort Yin, Pengju
collection PubMed
description Three-dimensional (3D) printing will create a revolution in the field of microfluidics due to fabricating truly three-dimensional channels in a single step. During the 3D-printing process, sacrificial materials are usually needed to fulfill channels inside and support the printed chip outside. Removing sacrificial materials after printing is obviously crucial for applying these 3D printed chips to microfluidics. However, there are few standard methods to address this issue. In this paper, engineering techniques of removing outer and inner sacrificial materials were studied. Meanwhile, quantification methods of removal efficiency for outer and inner sacrificial materials were proposed, respectively. For outer sacrificial materials, a hot bath in vegetable oil can remove 89.9% ± 0.1% of sacrificial materials, which is better than mechanics removal, hot oven heating, and an ethanol bath. For inner sacrificial materials, injecting 70 °C vegetable oil for 720 min is an optimized approach because of the uniformly high transmittance (93.8% ± 6.8%) and no obvious deformation. For the industrialization of microfluidics, the cost-effective removing time is around 10 min, which considers the balance between time cost and chip transmittance. The optimized approach and quantification methods presented in this paper show general engineering sacrificial materials removal techniques, which promote removing sacrificial materials from 3D-printed microfluidics chips and take 3D printing a step further in microfluidic applications.
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spelling pubmed-60822792018-11-01 Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics Yin, Pengju Hu, Bo Yi, Langlang Xiao, Chun Cao, Xu Zhao, Lei Shi, Hongyan Micromachines (Basel) Article Three-dimensional (3D) printing will create a revolution in the field of microfluidics due to fabricating truly three-dimensional channels in a single step. During the 3D-printing process, sacrificial materials are usually needed to fulfill channels inside and support the printed chip outside. Removing sacrificial materials after printing is obviously crucial for applying these 3D printed chips to microfluidics. However, there are few standard methods to address this issue. In this paper, engineering techniques of removing outer and inner sacrificial materials were studied. Meanwhile, quantification methods of removal efficiency for outer and inner sacrificial materials were proposed, respectively. For outer sacrificial materials, a hot bath in vegetable oil can remove 89.9% ± 0.1% of sacrificial materials, which is better than mechanics removal, hot oven heating, and an ethanol bath. For inner sacrificial materials, injecting 70 °C vegetable oil for 720 min is an optimized approach because of the uniformly high transmittance (93.8% ± 6.8%) and no obvious deformation. For the industrialization of microfluidics, the cost-effective removing time is around 10 min, which considers the balance between time cost and chip transmittance. The optimized approach and quantification methods presented in this paper show general engineering sacrificial materials removal techniques, which promote removing sacrificial materials from 3D-printed microfluidics chips and take 3D printing a step further in microfluidic applications. MDPI 2018-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC6082279/ /pubmed/30424260 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi9070327 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Yin, Pengju
Hu, Bo
Yi, Langlang
Xiao, Chun
Cao, Xu
Zhao, Lei
Shi, Hongyan
Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics
title Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics
title_full Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics
title_fullStr Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics
title_full_unstemmed Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics
title_short Engineering of Removing Sacrificial Materials in 3D-Printed Microfluidics
title_sort engineering of removing sacrificial materials in 3d-printed microfluidics
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6082279/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30424260
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mi9070327
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