The present invention relates to the fabrication and application of a micro-fluidic-electronic device, i.e. a device comprising at least one micro-fluidic component for receiving and interacting with a small fluid sample, and at least one electronic component whereby the interaction with the sample changes the electronic properties of the micro-fluidic electronic device. The invention further relates to the fabrication and application of an electronic circuitry integrated with at least one micro-fluidic component.
The sensing and detection of biomolecules in real-time is important in many medical diagnostic and environmental applications. In contrast to optical sensors, electronic biomolecular sensors offer the advantage of fast response and typically do not require modification of the biomolecules such as labeling with fluorescent markers. The device components are simple and compact in size and easy to integrate in more complex lab-on-chip devices.
Advances in the development of nanotubes/nanowire based transistor have opened a new path for label-free and real-time electronic detection of biological or chemical molecules in aqueous media with improved sensitivity over traditional electronic sensing methods. In one example, it is known to provide liquid-gated field-effect transistors (LGFET) on substrates of a plastics material, such as poly-(dimethyl siloxane) (PDMS). A known PDMS-based LGFET is illustrated in
However, a key feature needed in diagnostics is the availability of inexpensive and disposable sensors.
The present invention aims to provide new and useful microfluidic-electronic devices, as well as methods for producing the devices and methods for using the devices.
In general terms, the invention proposes forming at least one micro-fluidic electronic device on a substrate which is substantially formed on a sheet of paper. The micro-fluidic electronic device includes a micro-fluidic component and an electronic component, having an electrically-active layer. The electrically-active layer of the micro-fluidic electronic device interacts with a fluid sample deposited within a fluid reservoir of the microfluidic component, and thereby changes the electronic properties of the electronic component, and this can be detected by passing an electrical signal through the microfluidic-electronic device, and detecting the signal transmission properties of the electronic component.
The term “paper” is given a conventional meaning. The sheet of paper may optionally have at least one coating layer (e.g. a hydrophobic coating layer), but the aforementioned layer relies for its structural integrity on paper material. The term “paper material” is also used in this document in the conventional sense: a substance formed by pressing together cellulosic materials or starch based materials, typically in the presence of an inorganic fillers such as calcium carbonate, clay, or titanium oxide. The sheet of paper may be laminated from multiple paper material layers.
The term “microfluidic component” is used to refer to a component which is able to manipulate fluids by means of a fluidic channel or conductive contacts with dimensions in the micro range. The volume of the sample is typically measured in nanoliters or pico-liters.
The term “electronic component” is used to refer to a component which is able to make electrical connection and or manipulate charge.
The electrically-active material may be a “nano-material”, i.e. one comprising nanotubes, nanowires, grapheme, or fullerene, or it may comprise organic/inorganic semiconductor thin films. At least one of the layers may be a semi-conductor, while at least one other of the layers may be metallic in nature.
In one possibility, at least one component, either the microfluidic component (e.g. the material defining the fluid reservoir) and/or the electronic component (e.g. the electrically-active material) may be deposited on the paper by printing. Thus, the invention may take advantage of well developed printing technology on paper to construct micro-fluidic electronic devices at low cost. Printing techniques can include inkjet printing, screen printing etc, allowing for large scale fabrication. Previously, printing solution processing has been employed to deposit various nanomaterials, such as carbon nanotubes (CNTs), nanowires, graphene etc to construct electronic devices, but these devices have made use of multiple different materials to achieve the required function. Hence, the fabrication process is more complicated and lengthy. In the present invention the one or more electrically-active layers are preferably formed of a single material. If this material is printed on to the paper, it is possible to provide high throughput and highly inexpensive production of paper-based electronic components.
In another possibility, some or all components of the micro-fluidic electronic device may be formed by a mold casting method, i.e. preparing a mold which is located on the paper, and filling cavities of the mold with one or more liquids which dry to form the components. An advantage of mold casting over prior art methods is that it does not require neither complex and expensive instrumentation, nor highly skilled personnel, so it can be adopted for small-scale production.
Either of these two methods can be up-scaled to attain economies of scale, and hence push down the cost of the devices further. Additionally, the versatility of the fabrication methods offers an interesting potential to create multiple electronic components by printing. This ability to quickly design and print the working prototype of the component has several advantages: (1) it improves the turn-over rate of the designing process, and hence improves its productivity, (2) any defects in the design can be spotted early, and hence can be rectified accordingly at relatively low cost, (3) changes in the design can be incorporated easily, hence adding into the versatility of designs that can be produced.
In either case, the present invention is exemplified in an micro-fluidic electronic hybrid device: a liquid-gated field-effect transistor (LGFET) which can be used for monitoring bioanalytes activities in a liquid sample. The LGFET is an electrical transducer which can detect bioanalytes in liquid sample in real-time and label-free fashion. Very briefly, the LGFET is composed of a transducing element comprising nanotubes and/or nanowires, located between two metallic pads, and encased in a microfluidic reservoir (which may be formed as a microfluidic channel in a solid body, or by a wall encircling the reservoir). A liquid sample is passed over the nanotube/nanowires, and the electrical current is monitored upon the biomolecular interaction. Any bio-events that take place in the proximity of the nanotube/nanowire would then modulate the electrostatic landscape surrounding the nanotube/nanowire, and result in the modulation of the electrical current which can be followed in real-time. The LGFET is able to detect wide-ranging biomolecules open up the path for its application in various sectors, such as the biomedical sector, national security, environment monitoring, etc.
Preferably, the paper substrate carries a plurality of electronic components. These may all be fabricated from a single type of electrically-active material (e.g. nano-material) by spatially modulating the density of nano-material (via the printing and/or mold-casting process). The reduction of the number of materials involved in the construction of the micro-fluidic electronic device and the simplicity of the fabrication method results in lower production cost, and higher production throughput. The ability to create other types of paper-based electronics (e.g. resistors, diodes, and inductors) also offers an advantage in that they can add functionality into the micro-fluidic electronic devices, especially in sensing which may work based on different principle. This ability would enable more types of information to be collected from the sample. Such multi-dimensionality could improve our understanding of a sample, access information which is hard to obtain by using only one type of measurement, or simply add to the arsenal of detection methods which can be selected according to the requirement of a specific sample or experimentation. Finally, these paper-based electronic/fluidic devices could open the path to integrate and interface a microfluidic device with an electronic device such as an integrated circuit, which itself can be printed on the paper substrate.
The proposed method may include steps to alter at least one property of the nano-material. These modification processes allow tailoring of the surface properties and/or the bulk properties of the corresponding nano-material, as required by different situations. The modification of the property of the nano-material may use plasma, photo, mechanical, or chemical treatment. It may for example include density modification in which the electrically-active material is made more or less concentrated, such as by multiple steps of spraying, dipping, transfer printing electro-deposition, electrophoresis, or screen printing. Furthermore, the density or thickness of the electrically-active material may be altered in at least one location (for instance, if the micro-fluidic electronic device is an LGFET, in the channel region) by rubbing, scratching, scotch tape transfer technique or any other relevant technique that is effective in material removal and hence density alteration.
Alternatively, the electronic property modulation may be brought about by chemical means which may include plasma exposure, exposure to gaseous media, chemicals coatings, heat or light exposure. These treatment may be employ hard or soft masking methodologies which may use metal masks, screens, photoresists, PDMS or other polymer based masks or writing methods that may include laser writing, inkjet printing, spray deposition, etc.
Furthermore, the electronic property modulation may be brought about by means of addition of a second phase of electrically-active material, either conductive or semiconductive. For example, metallic nanoparticles or nanowires may be added to a semi-conductor material comprising carbon nanotubes.
Furthermore, it will be important to functionalise the electronic component to be sensitive to particular biomolecules. For example, in the case of an LG-FET the electrically-active material is generally functionalized with specific biomolecules to create a biosensor targeted for the detection of a specific analyte.
Note that this is not the first time that the formation of circuitry on paper has been proposed. For example, M. Dragoman, E. Flahaut, D. Dragoman, M Al Ahmad and R. Plana, “Writing simple RF electronic devices on paper with carbon nanotube ink” (Nanotechnology, Volume 20, 375203, 2009) proposed printing electronic components onto paper. However, the components proposed in that paper are principally for a radio device, and the circuit proposed in that paper is intended to be used in a wholly dry application. These authors did not describe the integration of fluidic and electronic components.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described for the sake of example only with reference to the following figures, in which:
a) shows a known micro-fluidic electronic device formed on two polymer layers laminated together;
a) shows a paper-based diode which can be incorporated into the same device as the embodiment of
a) shows experimental data of the kinetic response of the embodiment of
c) is a calibration plot from triplicate measurements in the experiment of
First we will describe an embodiment of the present invention which is shown in
The paper-based LGFET (
Another advantage of the paper-based LGFET is the ubiquity of paper itself. Paper is a common material which is used extensively in our everyday lives for many purposes. Paper and acrylic paint are commodities which can be obtained easily and inexpensively off-the-shelf. Additionally, the SWCNT film and the reservoir structure can both be patterned easily through printing and/or a mold-casting method. These methods can be up-scaled for mass-production and attaining economies of scale. These factors give paper-based LGFET a cost-leadership advantage as compared to a PDMS-based LGFET or other biosensing methods.
A PDMS-based LGFET and a paper-based LGFET are similar in that the SWCNT films are patterned to introduce metallic and semiconducting regions in a desired configuration. This pattern creates the required Schottky transistor architecture. Different types of patterns create other types of component, such as diodes, inductors, and resistors, as explained below. An entire family of components can be fabricated from a single nanomaterial, simply by printing and/or mold-casting specific patterns on a paper substrate, so that the corresponding nanomaterial exhibits a spatially modulated density on the paper substrate. An electronic circuit may combine one or more such components and may be combined with one or more micro-fluidic components to form a integrated microfluidic-electronic device according to the invention.
For example, a Schottky transistor can be regarded as two Schottky diode structures connected back-to-back. Thus, a Schottky diode can be produced using the same principles used for creating the LGFET of
A micro-fluidic electronic device which is another embodiment of the invention could be produced by forming a wall surrounding the diode of
Furthermore, other patterns of SWCNT film may also be printed on the paper to create various other electronic components. The fabrication of these other components is possible because these patterns introduce specific spatial modulation of the nanomaterial density on the paper substrate, which translates into regions in which either the semiconducting or metallic property predominates. Shown in
Furthermore, a resistor can also be made with this printing technique, as shown by
Optionally, the electronic components of
We now present techniques for characterizing electronic components formed on a paper substrate, and results from these techniques. A measurement set up for characterizing the paper-based transistor is shown in
The characterization of diode, however, is quite different from the characterization of the transistor (
The paper-based inductor of
R=Z
magnitude cos(θ)
ωL=Zmagnitude sin(θ) (1)
In one experiment, a paper-based CNT resistor and inductor were tested using a lock-in phase amplifier (Signal Recovery 7265) by applying an AC bias 0.5 VRMS with frequency 10,000 Hz and measuring the resultant current and phase angle.
The current amplitude for both components is about the same, indicating that the CNT paper-based resistor and inductor exhibit similar impedance. The inductive nature of the inductor, however, is made clear by the measured phase angle, which is close to zero for the case of CNT paper-based resistor, and about −35° for a CNT paper-based inductor.
a) is a schematic top-view of four components formed on a paper substrate using ink: a resistor, an LGFET, a diode and an inductor. The patterns necessary for the corresponding components are directly written on the paper either manually or by using a printing unit.
We now turn to a description of the methods to prepare paper-based fluidic/electronic device and to modify the properties of the nanomaterial.
Phosphate buffer (PB) solution of pH 7.4 was first prepared by mixing NaH2CO3 and Na2HCO3 solution in a pre-determined concentration. The two components were then stirred while the pH was monitored to attain the targeted pH.
Two SWCNT solution of different concentrations were then prepared. First, a concentrated SWCNT solution in a PB buffer was prepared by dissolving 25 mg of powder carboxylated SWCNT into 50 ml of the PB buffer to yield 50 ml of a 0.5 mg/ml SWCNT solution. Sodium Dodecyl Benzene Sulfonate (SDDBS) surfactant (10 v/v %) was then added into the concentrated SWCNT solution to help disperse the nanotubes in the aqueous media. The concentrated SWCNT solution was then sonicated for two hours in a probe sonicator to break up aggregations in the solution, and to improve its dispersion stability. A second SWCNT solution was then prepared by diluting a fraction of the first solution by 100 times.
The paper substrate used to prepare the device functions as a mechanical support. The nanotubes/nanowires must be able to adhere strongly on to the paper substrate, to withstand the washing steps for removing the surfactant from the nanotubes/nanowires. Hence, an appropriate type of paper was selected. In particular, paper which displays a hydrophobic surface property, such as photographic paper, is desirable for preparing the devices, because of its ability to interact well with the nanotubes/nanowires. Alternatively, a laminated, waxed or polymer coated paper may also be used, because these processes alter the surface property of the paper to become hydrophobic as well.
In order to prepare the hybrid devices, there are two general methods which were employed: printing and mold-casting. Different patterns can be introduced on to the paper to produce a corresponding specific component, and the reservoir can also be introduced on to the paper by printing curable polymers, such as acrylic paint, which are liquid at room temperature, but display resistance to water permeability upon cross-linking Acrylic paint is not the only material that can be used to create the reservoir. Other possible polymers which can be used include: epoxy and its derivatives, and groups of polymers from the polyester family.
To prepare the components by using the printing method, the SWCNT solutions were patterned on to the paper either manually or by using a printing machine. Regions of high- and low-density SWCNT/nanowire films were produced on the paper by controlling the positioning of the concentrated and diluted solutions respectively during the printing process. In this printing process, the paper substrate plays an additional role to prevent the SWCNT solution from spreading uncontrollably on the paper surface. This ability is imparted by selecting proper type of paper which displays a hydrophobic surface property. The resolution of the printing method is dictated by the resolution of the printing machine, and by how well the paper surface can prevent the SWCNT/nanowire solution from spreading. Since the two solutions had different SWCNT concentrations, they result in regions of the paper having a different number of SWCNTs per unit area (i.e. different “densities” of SWCNT).
Alternatively, the patterns can also be produced using a mold-casting method. In this case, a groove in the shape of the wall of the reservoir was cut in a pre-defined pattern into a thick film of PDMS or another type of polymer. The polymer film was then pasted on to the paper, and the groove was filled with concentrated and diluted SWCNT solution in their respective places, and allowed to dry. The resolution of mold-casting method is limited by the smallest feature that can be cut into the polymer film. The properties of the nanomaterial patterned film, and/or even the properties of the nanomaterial itself, are selected to meet specific requirements of the eventual devices being produced. The ability to tailor the properties of the nanostructure film and/or the nanomaterial itself is advantageous to fine tune the performance characteristics of the component to meet different requirements in different applications and conditions.
Several methods will be described in this technological disclosure to permit the modification of the nanomaterial patterned film and/or the nanomaterial itself. The first method is mechanical treatment. In this case, patterns in the form of bare thin strips can be introduced into less dense (semiconducting) region of the nanomaterial film (note that the strips may alternatively be formed by printing). The introduction of strips into the semiconducting region cuts the probability the metallic paths existing which span the semiconducting region, and hence improves the semiconducting behavior of the less-dense film. One application in which this technique may be useful is in the LGFET and diode architecture, where interfacing between semiconducting and metallic region is a pre-requisite.
Alternatively, the properties of the nanomaterial itself can be tailored physically and/or chemically. Physically, the properties of the nanomaterial can be altered by using plasma treatment, UV exposure, or a combination of both. In the case of plasma, the nanomaterial can be exposed to plasma of various gas compositions, such as Oxygen, Fluorine, Chlorine, Air, etc, at various power levels. The highly energetic species from the plasma could interact with the nanomaterial, and alter its properties. Alternatively or additionally, a UV treatment can be performed, in which the nanomaterial is exposed to the UV radiation with sufficient power to introduce the alteration to the corresponding nanomaterial.
The properties of the nanomaterial can also be changed chemically, by exposing the nanomaterial to reactive chemical species, such as: radicals, Fluorine, Chlorine, etc, in either the gas or liquid phase to induce a chemical reaction between the species and the nanomaterial to produce the desired alteration.
As mentioned above, electronic circuits including the electronic components described produced by the printing method could be incorporated with a microfluidic electronic sensing device such as an LGFET. The device circuit may be used for data processing for biosensing operations, optionally in combination with other circuitry/components located on the paper. Optionally, substantially all the circuitry is provided on the paper. Furthermore, multiple microfluidic components can be present on the same piece of paper, to create a self contained lab-on-chip device. In the following paragraphs we describe how a paper-based microfluidic electronic device, such as an LGFET, is prepared for a biosensing application.
For the sake of example only, we shall describe here the detection of a herbicide 2,4-dichlorophenoxy acetic acid (2,4-D) with a competitive immunoassay. For this, after the two solutions have dried, the carboxylated SWCNTs were first covalently linked with a bioconjugates of 2,4-D/Bovine Serum Albumin (BSA) with the aid of linker molecule 1-ethyl-3-[3-dimethylaminopropyl]carbodiimide Hydrochloride (EDC) and N-Hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) following a standard protocol. The coupling of EDC and NHS helps to establish an amide bond between the carboxylated SWCNT and the amine groups in the 2,4-D/BSA conjugate. After the bioconjugation, the active electronic layer was then washed thoroughly in a running DI water to cleanse any un-reacted bioconjugates. The un-reacted SWCNT surface was then exposed to a tween-20 (10 vol. % in PB buffer) blocking agent for two hours to prevent non-specific binding. The amphiphilic nature of tween-20 results in its hydrophobic tails being adsorbed on the nanotube surface, while its hydrophilic poly (ethylene glycol) (PEG) units were exposed into the solution. The presence of the PEG brush coating surrounding the nanotubes prevents interfering biomolecules from being adsorbed on to the nanotube surface, and hence minimizes the propensity of non-specific binding. The blocking process can be monitored by following the IDS against time.
To create a calibration plot (
A baseline IDS was collected in the kinetic measurement at the beginning of each experimentation, using PB buffer of the exact same ionic-strength as the one used for dissolving the biomolecules. Previous experimentations have shown that maintaining this ionic-strength is crucial to avoid false positives due to changes in the ionic-strength of the solution. The competitive immunoassay was then performed by injecting the pre-mixed solution into the reservoir of the paper-based LGFET. In this competitive immunoassay, the free un-reacted 2,4-D in the sample competes with the 2,4-D/BSA bioconjugates to bind with the anti-(2,4-D), and hence the signal level is inversely proportional to the concentration of the target bioanalytes. Three measurements were repeated to ensure the repeatability of the data. The resulting data was then plotted into calibration curve, and fitted according to a logarithmic function with three-parameters:
The statistical test Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) was then performed to determine the aggregate variance from the regression, taking into account the inter-experiments spread of data. Three times of the standard deviation (3σ) obtained from the ANOVA test was then used as the criterion to calculate the limit of detection, again by using Equation (2). The results obtained from the kinetic measurement are shown in
A time delay of approximately 10 minutes is observed between sample injection and the change in the IDS, as shown in
The corresponding calibration plot obtained from triplicate measurements is shown in
As discussed above, the paper-based circuit can also include passive electronic components. The components can be interconnected to form a functional electronic device to perform other functions within a fluidic based platform.
Another example is an amplifier circuit, as one shown in
Number | Date | Country | |
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61473534 | Apr 2011 | US |