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Polymers Show Promise For Lab-On-A-Chip
Technology
University of Alberta researchers, collaborating
with colleagues at the Eindhoven University of Technology
and Phillips Research Laboratories in the Netherlands,
have shown that LCP, when formed into a thin film on
a glass backing, can be fabricated and patterned on
a microscale. The research was published recently in
the Journal of Material Chemistry.
"Based on our research of liquid crystalline polymers,
we anticipate the emergence of exciting new techniques
in microfabrication that can be used to cheaply and
efficiently pattern response materials," said Anastasia
Elias, a PhD student in Dr. Michael Brett's group in
the U of A Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
and the first author of the paper.
LCPs are often described as "artificial muscles"
that can convert thermal, chemical and electromagnetic
stimuli into mechanical energy, Elias said. LCPs are
polymers made from liquid crystalline molecules, which
are well-known for their use in display applications,
such as laptop computer screens, where they are used
for their unique optical properties.
Elias and her colleagues conducted a number of preliminary
LCP experiments on a microscale in order to better understand
and describe the material's mechanical properties. They
believe the material holds promise as a microscale building
block. It's now up to other engineers and scientist
to take this knowledge and create useful microscale
devices.
The most commonly cited goal among micro- and nanoscale
researchers is to create a lab-on-a-chip – a tiny
system that could be used, for example, to analyze blood
samples and biopsies much faster, cheaper and more comprehensively
than current methods.
In the past, most microscale research and development
funds have targeted silicon, the fundamental material
in the semiconductor industry. But LCPs are less brittle
and more pliable than silicon, Elias said, adding that
LCP devices could be tailored to respond to specific
external stimuli, such as temperature changes and UV
radiation exposure, which could makes them easier to
activate than silicon. And, perhaps most importantly
of all, LCPs are less expensive than silicon and potentially
easier to process, Elias said.
"Ultimately, we believe liquid crystalline polymers
will be fully integrated in microelectromechanical systems,
such as the emerging lab-on-a-chip applications,"
she said.
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