Issue 24, 2014

A novel MEMS compatible lab-on-a-tube technology

Abstract

We present a novel lab-on-a-tube technology, which is a combination of three-dimensional (3D) cylindrical photolithography and nanoimprint processes, for fabricating microfunctional structures on a tiny tube substrate directly. As an example, electrochemical electrodes, which consisted of Pt work and Ag/AgCl reference electrodes, were successfully fabricated on a 330-μm-diameter polyimide capillary. Using thermal nanoimprint technology, a microdome array with a diameter of 2 μm to about 600 nm was prepared in the work and reference electrodes. The nanoimprinted domes greatly enhanced the electrochemical activity and there were much higher oxidation and reduction current peaks observed in cyclic voltammetry curves of the nanoimprinted electrode than those of the blank electrode without the nanoimprint modification. The nanoimprinted patterns exhibited complicated effects, e.g. the 600-nm-diameter dome sample has higher electrochemical activity than the 2-μm-diameter dome, while the latter has a larger surface. By using the new lab-on-a-tube technology, new bio- and nanomaterials could be integrated directly into electronic devices on tiny tube substrates so that many interesting applications could be expected in medical and life technologies.

Graphical abstract: A novel MEMS compatible lab-on-a-tube technology

Article information

Article type
Technical Innovation
Submitted
28 Aug 2014
Accepted
24 Sep 2014
First published
24 Sep 2014

Lab Chip, 2014,14, 4604-4608

Author version available

A novel MEMS compatible lab-on-a-tube technology

Z. Yang, Y. Zhang, T. Itoh and R. Maeda, Lab Chip, 2014, 14, 4604 DOI: 10.1039/C4LC00997E

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