Functional hydrogel structures for autonomous flow control inside microfluidic channels

DJ Beebe, JS Moore, JM Bauer, Q Yu, RH Liu… - nature, 2000 - nature.com
DJ Beebe, JS Moore, JM Bauer, Q Yu, RH Liu, C Devadoss, BH Jo
nature, 2000nature.com
Hydrogels have been developed to respond to a wide variety of stimuli,,,,,, but their use in
macroscopic systems has been hindered by slow response times (diffusion being the rate-
limiting factor governing the swelling process). However, there are many natural examples
of chemically driven actuation that rely on short diffusion paths to produce a rapid response.
It is therefore expected that scaling down hydrogel objects to the micrometre scale should
greatly improve response times. At these scales, stimuli-responsive hydrogels could …
Abstract
Hydrogels have been developed to respond to a wide variety of stimuli,,,,,, but their use in macroscopic systems has been hindered by slow response times (diffusion being the rate-limiting factor governing the swelling process). However, there are many natural examples of chemically driven actuation that rely on short diffusion paths to produce a rapid response. It is therefore expected that scaling down hydrogel objects to the micrometre scale should greatly improve response times. At these scales, stimuli-responsive hydrogels could enhance the capabilities of microfluidic systems by allowing self-regulated flow control. Here we report the fabrication of active hydrogel components inside microchannels via direct photopatterning of a liquid phase. Our approach greatly simplifies system construction and assembly as the functional components are fabricated in situ, and the stimuli-responsive hydrogel components perform both sensing and actuation functions. We demonstrate significantly improved response times (less than 10 seconds) in hydrogel valves capable of autonomous control of local flow.
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