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Journal ArticleDOI

Liquid metal enabled microfluidics

TLDR
Liquid metal enabled microfluidic components are discussed, and their desirable attributes are highlighted including simple fabrication, facile integration, stretchability, reconfigurability, and low power consumption, with promising applications for highly integrated microfluidity systems.
Abstract
Several gallium-based liquid metal alloys are liquid at room temperature. As 'liquid', such alloys have a low viscosity and a high surface tension while as 'metal', they have high thermal and electrical conductivities, similar to mercury. However, unlike mercury, these liquid metal alloys have low toxicity and a negligible vapor pressure, rendering them much safer. In comparison to mercury, the distinguishing feature of these alloys is the rapid formation of a self-limiting atomically thin layer of gallium oxide over their surface when exposed to oxygen. This oxide layer changes many physical and chemical properties of gallium alloys, including their interfacial and rheological properties, which can be employed and modulated for various applications in microfluidics. Injecting liquid metal into microfluidic structures has been extensively used to pattern and encapsulate highly deformable and reconfigurable electronic devices including electrodes, sensors, antennas, and interconnects. Likewise, the unique features of liquid metals have been employed for fabricating miniaturized microfluidic components including pumps, valves, heaters, and electrodes. In this review, we discuss liquid metal enabled microfluidic components, and highlight their desirable attributes including simple fabrication, facile integration, stretchability, reconfigurability, and low power consumption, with promising applications for highly integrated microfluidic systems.

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Liquid metals: fundamentals and applications in chemistry

TL;DR: This review provides a comprehensive overview of the fundamentals underlying liquid metal research, including liquid metal synthesis, surface functionalisation and liquid metal enabled chemistry, and discusses phenomena that warrant further investigations in relevant fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

A liquid metal reaction environment for the room-temperature synthesis of atomically thin metal oxides.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used room-temperature liquid metals as a reaction environment for the synthesis of oxide nanomaterials with low dimensionality, which can be used to create 2D materials that were previously inaccessible with preexisting methods.
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Materials and Structures toward Soft Electronics.

TL;DR: A discussion of the strategies in materials innovation and structural design to build soft electronic devices and systems is provided and perspectives on the key challenges and future directions of this field are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Attributes, Fabrication, and Applications of Gallium-Based Liquid Metal Particles.

TL;DR: Gallium‐based liquid metal particles possess several notable attributes, including a metal–metal oxide (liquid–solid) core–shell structure as well as the ability to self‐heal, merge, and change shape, which makes it amenable to many applications.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Monolithic microfabricated valves and pumps by multilayer soft lithography

TL;DR: An extension to the soft lithography paradigm, multilayersoft lithography, with which devices consisting of multiple layers may be fabricated from soft materials is described, to build active microfluidic systems containing on-off valves, switching valves, and pumps entirely out of elastomer.
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Microfluidics: Fluid physics at the nanoliter scale

TL;DR: A review of the physics of small volumes (nanoliters) of fluids is presented, as parametrized by a series of dimensionless numbers expressing the relative importance of various physical phenomena as mentioned in this paper.
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Chaotic Mixer for Microchannels

TL;DR: This work presents a passive method for mixing streams of steady pressure-driven flows in microchannels at low Reynolds number, and uses bas-relief structures on the floor of the channel that are easily fabricated with commonly used methods of planar lithography.
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Functional hydrogel structures for autonomous flow control inside microfluidic channels

TL;DR: The fabrication of active hydrogel components inside microchannels via direct photopatterning of a liquid phase greatly simplifies system construction and assembly as the functional components are fabricated in situ, and the stimuli-responsive hydrogels components perform both sensing and actuation functions.
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A review of micropumps

TL;DR: In this article, the authors survey progress over the past 25 years in the development of microscale devices for pumping fluids and attempt to provide both a reference for micropump researchers and a resource for those outside the field who wish to identify the best micropumps for a particular application.
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