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Our ultimate goal of making cells battle within a microfluidic chip for entertainment purposes is a project which has never been attempted.Therefore, the unique design needed for our microfluidics chips had to be created from scratch. The design process required the operation of AutoCAD: a software application for drafting 2D and 3D design. Since microfluidic chips are normally used for biological assays, we had to take into consideration the forces acting on a droplet with isolated cells, and how the droplets can be manipulated to battle each other. Over the course of two months, the team learned how to use the program to design a various array of microfluidic chips ranging from an intricate mosaic of channels to creatively ingenious designs. The team payed attention to detail, from the measurements of the channel width, outlets, and inlets to accommodate E.coli and S.cerevisiae: with all these limitations the team produced eight different chip designs. In addition, to acheive a “head-on” a battle the mechanics of the droplet had to be manipulated, therefore electrodes were added to induce a turbulent flow when the droplets merge. The next step is fabricating the master microfluidics chip through a process called photolithography where a silicon wafer that is coated with a thin layer of of SU-8 photoresist is exposed to UV-light and the photomask pattern is transferred to the silicon wafer. | Our ultimate goal of making cells battle within a microfluidic chip for entertainment purposes is a project which has never been attempted.Therefore, the unique design needed for our microfluidics chips had to be created from scratch. The design process required the operation of AutoCAD: a software application for drafting 2D and 3D design. Since microfluidic chips are normally used for biological assays, we had to take into consideration the forces acting on a droplet with isolated cells, and how the droplets can be manipulated to battle each other. Over the course of two months, the team learned how to use the program to design a various array of microfluidic chips ranging from an intricate mosaic of channels to creatively ingenious designs. The team payed attention to detail, from the measurements of the channel width, outlets, and inlets to accommodate E.coli and S.cerevisiae: with all these limitations the team produced eight different chip designs. In addition, to acheive a “head-on” a battle the mechanics of the droplet had to be manipulated, therefore electrodes were added to induce a turbulent flow when the droplets merge. The next step is fabricating the master microfluidics chip through a process called photolithography where a silicon wafer that is coated with a thin layer of of SU-8 photoresist is exposed to UV-light and the photomask pattern is transferred to the silicon wafer. | ||
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<img class="imagen2" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/9/97/T--Concordia--micro3.jpg"> | <img class="imagen2" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/9/97/T--Concordia--micro3.jpg"> | ||
<img class="imagen2" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/c/ca/T--Concordia--micro2.jpg"> | <img class="imagen2" src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/c/ca/T--Concordia--micro2.jpg"> |
Revision as of 01:16, 20 October 2016