Bottom-Up Fabrication of Paper-Based Microchips by
Blade Coating of Cellulose Microfibers on a Patterned Surface
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Abstract
We
report a method for the bottom-up fabrication of paper-based
capillary microchips by the blade coating of cellulose microfibers
on a patterned surface. The fabrication process is similar to the
paper-making process in which an aqueous suspension of cellulose microfibers
is used as the starting material and is blade-coated onto a polypropylene
substrate patterned using an inkjet printer. After water evaporation,
the cellulose microfibers form a porous, hydrophilic, paperlike pattern
that wicks aqueous solution by capillary action. This method enables
simple, fast, inexpensive fabrication of paper-based capillary channels
with both width and height down to about 10 μm. When this method
is used, the capillary microfluidic chip for the colorimetric detection
of glucose and total protein is fabricated, and the assay requires
only 0.30 μL of sample, which is 240 times smaller than for
paper devices fabricated using photolithography