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Journal ArticleDOI

Creating, transporting, cutting, and merging liquid droplets by electrowetting-based actuation for digital microfluidic circuits

TLDR
In this paper, the authors report the completion of four fundamental fluidic operations considered essential to build digital microfluidic circuits, which can be used for lab-on-a-chip or micro total analysis system (/spl mu/TAS): 1) creating, 2) transporting, 3) cutting, and 4) merging liquid droplets, all by electrowetting.
Abstract
Reports the completion of four fundamental fluidic operations considered essential to build digital microfluidic circuits, which can be used for lab-on-a-chip or micro total analysis system (/spl mu/TAS): 1) creating, 2) transporting, 3) cutting, and 4) merging liquid droplets, all by electrowetting, i.e., controlling the wetting property of the surface through electric potential. The surface used in this report is, more specifically, an electrode covered with dielectrics, hence, called electrowetting-on-dielectric (EWOD). All the fluidic movement is confined between two plates, which we call parallel-plate channel, rather than through closed channels or on open surfaces. While transporting and merging droplets are easily verified, we discover that there exists a design criterion for a given set of materials beyond which the droplet simply cannot be cut by EWOD mechanism. The condition for successful cutting is theoretically analyzed by examining the channel gap, the droplet size and the degree of contact angle change by electrowetting on dielectric (EWOD). A series of experiments is run and verifies the criterion.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Hysteretic DC electrowetting by field-induced nano-structurations on polystyrene films

TL;DR: It is conjecture that the hysteretic EW response appears from in situ surface modification using electric field induced water-ion contact with PS surface inducing nano-structuration by electro-hydrodynamic (EHD) instability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Volumeless reagent delivery: a liquid handling method for adding reagents to microscale droplets without increasing volume

TL;DR: The addition of reagents for assays in digital microfluidic (DMF) systems is traditionally done by merging of droplets containing different analytes or reagents in solution, but this process significantly increases in complexity.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Enhanced Droplet Mixer by LDEP on Spiral Microelectrodes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrated a micromixer in which a liquid column was pumped in a virtual channel without channel walls by LDEP, and two droplets were first transported and joined together by EWOD actuation.

Numerical simulation of droplet-based microfluidics

TL;DR: The features and applications of interface tracking techniques for modeling deroplet-based microfluidics, and the state of the art of methods for tracking and capturing the interface are reviewed.
References
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Book

Fundamentals of microfabrication

TL;DR: The second edition of the Fundamentals of Microfabrication as discussed by the authors provides an in-depth coverage of the science of miniaturization, its methods, and materials, from the fundamentals of lithography through bonding and packaging to quantum structures and molecular engineering.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrowetting-based actuation of liquid droplets for microfluidic applications

TL;DR: In this article, a microactuator for rapid manipulation of discrete microdroplets is presented, which is accomplished by direct electrical control of the surface tension through two sets of opposing planar electrodes fabricated on glass.
Book

Micromachined Transducers Sourcebook

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an overview of Micromachining Techniques, Mechanical Transducers, Optical Transducers and Ionizing Radiation Transducers for Microfluidic Devices.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrowetting-based actuation of droplets for integrated microfluidics

TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative approach to microfluidics based upon the micromanipulation of discrete droplets of aqueous electrolyte by electrowetting is reported.
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