Issue 17, 2011

Next-generation integrated microfluidic circuits

Abstract

This mini-review provides a brief overview of recent devices that use networks of elastomeric valves to minimize or eliminate the need for interconnections between microfluidic chips and external instruction lines that send flow control signals. Conventional microfluidic control mechanisms convey instruction signals in a parallel manner such that the number of instruction lines must increase as the number of independently operated valves increases. The devices described here circumvent this “tyranny of microfluidic interconnects” by the serial encoding of information to enable instruction of an arbitrary number of independent valves with a set number of control lines, or by the microfluidic circuit-embedded encoding of instructions to eliminate control lines altogether. Because the parallel instruction chips are the most historical and straightforward to design, they are still the most commonly used approach today. As requirements for instruction complexity, chip-to-chip communication, and real-time on-chip feedback flow control arise, the next generation of integrated microfluidic circuits will need to incorporate these latest interconnect flow control approaches.

Graphical abstract: Next-generation integrated microfluidic circuits

Article information

Article type
Frontier
Submitted
05 May 2011
Accepted
05 Jul 2011
First published
28 Jul 2011

Lab Chip, 2011,11, 2813-2818

Next-generation integrated microfluidic circuits

B. Mosadegh, T. Bersano-Begey, J. Y. Park, M. A. Burns and S. Takayama, Lab Chip, 2011, 11, 2813 DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20387H

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