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Caltech

We are working on development of high-sensitivity microfluidic calorimeters and their applications on biological sciences.

image

Figure 1. Polymer-based microfluidic calorimeter chip. (a) Device mounted on a vacuum chuck. (b) The central active region of the chip. (c) The Parylene microfluidics, the thermopile and the heater on the parylene membrane. (d) Magnified view of the Parylene measurement chamber.

High-sensitivity microfluidic calorimeters [1 ~3] raise the prospect of achieving high throughput biochemical measurements with minimal sample consumption. We have developed chip-based microfluidic calorimeters capable of characterizing the heat of reaction of sub-nanoliter scale samples with ~ one nanowatt resolution. Our approach, based on a combination of Poly-dimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and Parylene microfluidics provides both exceptional thermal response and the physical strength necessary to construct high-sensitivity calorimeters that are readily scalable to automated, highly-multiplexed array architectures. PDMS microfluidic valves and pumps are interfaced to Parylene channels and reaction chambers to automate the control of analyte handling and fluid flow and, thereby, the control of chemical reactions with sub-nanoliter resolution. We attain excellent thermal resolution via on-chip vacuum encapsulation, which provides unprecedented thermal isolation of the minute microfluidic reaction chambers.

The device structure can be easily adapted to enable a wide variety of standard calorimeter operations, such as ITC, DSC and flow calorimetry. We are currently focusing on application of the calorimeter device to study cellular metabolism.

Personnel
Wonhee Lee, Warren Fon, and Michael Roukes

References

  1. Torres FE, et al. (2004) Enthalpy array. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 101:9517–9522
  2. Xu J, Reiserer R, Tellinghuisen J, Wikswo JP, Baudenbacher FJ (2008) A microfabricated nanocalorimeter: design, characterization, and chemical calibration. Anal. chem. 80:2728-2733
  3. Wang L, Sipe DM, Xu Y, Lin Q (2008) A MEMS thermal biosensor for  metabolic monitoring applications. J. Microelectromech. Sys. 17:318-327


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