Published 2012
| Version v1
Publication
Mechanical squeezing of an elastomeric nanochannel device: numerical simulations and ionic current characterization
Description
Peculiar transport phenomena appear at nanoscale,
since surface effects strongly affect the behaviour of
fluids. Electrostatic and steric interactions, capillary forces
and entropic effects play a key role in the behaviour of
fluids and biomolecules. Since these effects strongly
depend on the size of the nanofluidic system, a careful
characterization of the fluidic environment is necessary.
Moreover, the possibility to dynamically modulate the size
of nanochannels is very appealing in the field of biomolecule
manipulation. Recently, we have developed a lab-onchip
made of poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS). This polymeric
device is based on a tuneable nanochannel able to
dynamically change its dimension in order to fit the
application of interest. In fact, a mechanical compression
applied on the top of the elastomeric device squeezes the
nanochannel, reducing the channel cross section and
allowing a dynamical optimization of the nanostructures. In
this paper, this squeezing process is fully characterized
both numerically and experimentally. This analysis provides
information on the reduction of the nanochannel
dimensions induced by compression as a function of the
work of adhesion and of the stiffness of the materials
composing the device. Moreover, calculations demonstrate
the possibility to predict the change of the nanochannel size and shape induced by the compression. The possibility to
dynamically tune the channel size opens up new opportunities
in biomolecular sensing or sieving and in the study of
new hydrodynamics effects.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/379649
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/379649
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE