4.7 Article

A reconfigurable continuous-flow fluidic routing fabric using a modular, scalable primitive

Journal

LAB ON A CHIP
Volume 16, Issue 14, Pages 2730-2741

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6lc00477f

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Award [1253856]
  2. United States Air Force Academy Faculty Pipeline Fellowship

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Microfluidic devices, by definition, are required to move liquids from one physical location to another. Given a finite and frequently fixed set of physical channels to route fluids, a primitive design element that allows reconfigurable routing of that fluid from any of n input ports to any n output ports will dramatically change the paradigms by which these chips are designed and applied. Furthermore, if these elements are regular regarding their design, the programming and fabrication of these elements becomes scalable. This paper presents such a design element called a transposer. We illustrate the design, fabrication and operation of a single transposer. We then scale this design to create a programmable fabric towards a general-purpose, reconfigurable microfluidic platform analogous to the Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) found in digital electronics.

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