Issue 17, 2023

Rapid microfluidics prototyping through variotherm desktop injection molding for multiplex diagnostics

Abstract

In this work, we demonstrate an inexpensive method of prototyping microfluidics using a desktop injection molding machine. A centrifugal microfluidic device with a novel central filling mechanism was developed to demonstrate the technique. We overcame the limitations of desktop machines in replicating microfluidic features by variotherm heating and cooling the mold between 50 °C and 110 °C within two minutes. Variotherm heating enabled good replication of microfeatures, with a coefficient of variation averaging only 3.6% attained for the measured widths of 100 μm wide molded channels. Using this methodology, we produced functional polystyrene centrifugal microfluidic chips, capable of aliquoting fluids into 5.0 μL reaction chambers with 97.5% accuracy. We performed allele-specific loop-mediated isothermal amplification (AS-LAMP) reactions for genotyping CYP2C19 alleles on these chips. Readouts were generated using optical pH sensors integrated onto chips, by drop-casting sensor precursor solutions into reaction chambers before final chip assembly. Positive reactions could be discerned by decreases in pH sensor fluorescence, thresholded against negative control reactions lacking the primers for nucleic acid amplification and with time-to-results averaging 38 minutes. Variotherm desktop injection molding can enable researchers to prototype microfluidic devices more cost-effectively, in an iterative fashion, due to reduced costs of smaller, in-house molds. Designs prototyped this way can be directly translated to mass production, enhancing their commercialization potential and positive impacts.

Graphical abstract: Rapid microfluidics prototyping through variotherm desktop injection molding for multiplex diagnostics

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
05 May 2023
Accepted
10 Jul 2023
First published
13 Jul 2023

Lab Chip, 2023,23, 3850-3861

Rapid microfluidics prototyping through variotherm desktop injection molding for multiplex diagnostics

G. D. Suarez, S. Bayer, Y. Y. K. Tang, D. A. Suarez, P. P. Cheung and S. Nagl, Lab Chip, 2023, 23, 3850 DOI: 10.1039/D3LC00391D

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