Issue 2, 2011

Time-of-flight thermal flowrate sensor for lab-on-chip applications

Abstract

We describe a thermal microflowrate sensor for measuring liquid flow velocity in microfluidic channels, which is capable of providing a highly accurate response independent of the thermal and physical properties of the working liquid. The sensor consists of a rectangular channel containing a heater and several temperature detectors microfabricated on suspended silicon bridges. Heat pulses created by the heater are advected downstream by the flow and are detected using the temperature detector bridges. By injecting a pseudo-stochastic thermal signal at the heater and performing a cross correlation between the detected and the injected signals, we can measure the single-pulse response of the system with excellent signal-to-noise ratio and hence deduce the thermal signal time-of-flight from heater to detector. Combining results from several detector bridges allows us to eliminate diffusion effects, and thus calculate the flow velocity with excellent accuracy and linearity over more than two orders of magnitude. The experimental results obtained with several test fluids closely agree with data from finite element analysis. We developed a phenomenological model which supports and explains the observed sensor response. Several fully functional sensor prototypes were built and characterized, proving the feasibility and providing a critical component to microfluidic lab-on-chip applications where accurate flow measurements are of importance.

Graphical abstract: Time-of-flight thermal flowrate sensor for lab-on-chip applications

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Jul 2010
Accepted
11 Oct 2010
First published
12 Nov 2010

Lab Chip, 2011,11, 215-223

Time-of-flight thermal flowrate sensor for lab-on-chip applications

H. Berthet, J. Jundt, J. Durivault, B. Mercier and D. Angelescu, Lab Chip, 2011, 11, 215 DOI: 10.1039/C0LC00229A

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