toto slot situs toto toto slot toto slot situs toto situs toto situs slot situs toto toto slot situs toto situs toto situs toto toto toto slot toto slot toto toto slot situs toto toto slot toto toto slot situs toto toto toto toto toto slot toto slot toto toto slot toto toto toto totototositus toto situs toto situs toto toto toto situs toto situs toto toto situs toto situs toto toto slot toto situs toto situs toto situs togel situs toto toto slot toto toto toto slot situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto toto toto toto toto slot 4d toto toto togel situs toto slot 4d situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto toto slot situs toto situs toto situs toto toto togel situs toto toto togel toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto
situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto situs toto
skip to Main Content
bool(false)
light-hydrogel-valves

Customer paper on light-based hydrogel valves

Tuning microfluidic flow by pulsed light oscillating spiropyran-based polymer hydrogel valves

By SimonColeman, Jeroen ter Schiphorst, Aymen Ben Azouz, Sterre Bakker, Albertus P.H.J. Schenning, Dermot Diamond from Ireland and the Netherlands.

A method for microfluidic flow control based upon polymer hydrogel valves with rapid and reversible actuation properties is described. The platform allows for contactless optical flow control based upon pulsing light, resulting in a forced oscillating and control over the valve through photo-isomerisation of a spiropyran derivative, co-polymerised within an N-isopropylacrylamide (NIPAm) hydrogel. Application of pulsed light (450 nm) to the valves allows the valves to be held at an intermediate position for extended periods of time. Varying the extent of pulsing of the light source enables the flow rate to be regulated within a microfluidic flow rate range of 0–27 ?L/min. Due to the pulsed light, a small period change in the flow rate is observed that corresponds to the pulse sequence as a corresponding oscillation in the hydrogel valves.

 

This work was made possible thanks to our FRP to monitor all flow-rates in the system.

For more information: doi: 10.1016/j.snb.2017.01.112 or Sens. and Act. B. 245, pp81-86 (2017).

Back To Top