Micro Fluidics Applications
Micro Fluidics Applications
Micro Fluidics Applications
Micro-fluidics is the science and technology of manipulating and analyzing fluid flow in
structures of sub-millimeter dimensions. This field will be essential in a variety of future
high-tech applications, such as micro-channel cooling for electronics, inkjet printing for
displays and biomedical applications, controlled drug delivery systems, pharmaceutical
and chemical high-throughput testing, and biosensors. Considering the various
applications, the fluids to be manipulated may be quite complex, such as blood, saliva,
urine, or polymer solutions.
actuator
radio
battery
outlet
biosensor
reservoir
Figure 1: Artists impression of an electronic pill. The pill is steered through the body, and
releases, in a controlled way, medicine at a desired location and at the precisely controlled dose.
One example is controlled drug delivery. In this application, a drug delivery system is
either implanted in the human body, or attached to the skin, and medicine is released in a
controlled way into the body. Another option is to encapsulate the medicine in a
micrometer-sized container that is introduced into the human body, and which is
subsequently directed to a specific location where the medicine is released (the
electronic pill). Artificial cilia may well be a suitable means of achieving an actively
controlled drug release system. Important features that could be enabled are electronic
pill propulsion, and accurate dosing of liquids, for example to achieve correct mixing
ratios between two substances, or a deterministic amount of reagents.
Reaction chambers
(washing, mixing, reaction)
Sensor
Plastic cartridge
Micro-channels
The micro-fluidics, obviously, is essential in all these developments. Often, not only
transport of the fluid is needed, also local mixing (for example in micro-reaction
chambers), or specific flow pattern generation (for example near the biosensor detection
site), are desired. Various actuation mechanisms have been and are being developed.
Some of these are arrived at by simply scaling down established macroscopic concepts to
smaller dimensions, as e.g. in most micro-fabricated mechanical valves or pumps. The
smallest sizes achieved mostly are still on the order of millimeters or several hundreds of
micrometers, so that a true integration in a micro-fluidic device is not possible. Others
use physical effects that are predominant at small scales, such as surface tension.