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Electrical Textile Valves for Paper Microfluidics

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2017

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Wiley-Blackwell
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Ainla, Alar, Mahiar M. Hamedi, Firat Güder, and George M. Whitesides. 2017. “Electrical Textile Valves for Paper Microfluidics.” Advanced Materials 29 (38) (August 15): 1702894. Portico. doi:10.1002/adma.201702894.

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Abstract

This paper describes electrically-activated fluidic valves that operate based on electrowetting through textiles. The valves are fabricated from electrically conductive, insulated, hydrophobic textiles, but the concept can be extended to other porous materials. When the valve is closed, the liquid cannot pass through the hydrophobic textile. Upon application of a potential (in the range of 100–1000 V) between the textile and the liquid, the valve opens and the liquid penetrates the textile. These valves actuate in less than 1 s, require low energy (≈27 µJ per actuation), and work with a variety of aqueous solutions, including those with low surface tension and those containing bioanalytes. They are bistable in function, and are, in a sense, the electrofluidic analog of thyristors. They can be integrated into paper microfluidic devices to make circuits that are capable of controlling liquid, including autonomous fluidic timers and fluidic logic.

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electrowetting, paper microfluidics, textiles, valves

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