Valved microfluidics with Ostemers

Abstract

Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) is the material of choice for fabricating high-performance microfluidic devices, yet its intrinsic limitations, such as poor surface wettability, chemical instability, and porosity, continue to constrain device functionality and material integration. Ostemer polymers, a versatile family of hybrid thermoset-elastomers, present an attractive alternative owing to their excellent chemical resistance, compatibility with surface modification, tunable mechanical properties and ease of scalable fabrication. Here, for the first time, we introduce a process employing Ostemers for the realization of valved microfluidic architectures. The device features a three-layer stack design that decouples the roles of the flow, membrane, and control layers, enabling optimized performance and flexible material combinations. The valve membrane, composed of the optical adhesive NOA-84, exhibits predictable deflection behavior in agreement with theoretical models under pneumatic actuation. The fabricated valves (75 × 75 μm2 chip1 and 100 × 145 μm2 chip4 membrane area) achieve switching transition times of approximately 200 ms, comparable to PDMS-based systems. Furthermore, we demonstrate long-term operational stability in ultrathin, flexible devices, as well as sustained performance under exposure to chemically aggressive environments. This Ostemer-based platform effectively addresses the chronic shortcomings of PDMS microfluidics, paving the way toward next-generation microfluidic systems with enhanced integration, durability, and functional diversity.

Graphical abstract: Valved microfluidics with Ostemers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
15 Oct 2025
Accepted
23 Mar 2026
First published
05 May 2026

Lab Chip, 2026, Advance Article

Valved microfluidics with Ostemers

N. Kumar K. R., S. Hamid, A. K. Niketa, E. Prajapati and S. Kumar, Lab Chip, 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5LC00968E

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