Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBrianne Walton Modified over 9 years ago
1
Presentation: Microfabrication of Polymeres Ferdinand METZLER HKUST / 26 November 2014
2
1 Agenda Introduction Manufacturing Processes Applications Plastics and Polymers
3
2 Introduction Why plastics? / Substrates used in Microtechnology Why? Why Plastics? Huge diversity of plastic materials Wide variety of properties like chemical resistance, inertness, deformability etc. Multitude of methods for device fabrication and processing Cheap and disposable (contamination, medical applications) Many standard laboratory items are already plastics (pipettes, tubes, beads etc.) Respective chemistry and protocols exist Why? Substrate mostly used in Microtechnology Silicon +Wide range of fabrication methods (etch stops, etching techniques, etc.) -Electrically and thermally conductive, brittle Glass +Chemically inert, transparent -Etching, trough holes, expensive Plastics +Wide range of tailored polymers formulations available +Low cost fabrication, rapid prototyping +Biocompatible, optically transparent -Not as inert as glass or quartz, lower temperature resistance -Some are sensitive to moisture
4
3 Agenda Introduction Manufacturing Processes Applications Plastics and Polymers
5
4 Plastics and Polymers Polymer Categories Why? Categories Thermoplasts Can be thermally deformed Amorphous or partially crystalline Physical interactions (no chemical bonds between chains) PC, PE, PP, etc. Duroplasts Hard and glasslike polymers Not deformable after initial setting, brittle Strongly three-dimensional cross-linked polymers Elastomers Elastic polymer Weakly cross linked At ambient temperature relatively soft Why? Structures
6
5 Agenda Introduction Manufacturing Processes Applications Plastics and Polymers
7
6 Manufacturing Process Polymerization Why? Polymerization Prozess Polyaddition Monomers bond together via rearrangement of bonds No loss of any atom of molecule Polycondensation Monomers bond together By-product such as water or methanol Radical Polymerization Successive addition of free radical building blocks Process starts with an Initiation then Propagation and Recombination
8
7 Manufacturing Process Lithography SU-8 SU-8 Processing Substrate silicon wafer Sacrificial layer, e.g., Cr-Au-Cr SU-8 deposition (spin-coating) Pre-bake at 90°C UV-exposure Post-bake at 90°C Repeat deposition through post-bake steps to achieve 3D microstructures Development in solvent to remove unexposed SU-8 Structure release by sacrificial layer etching
9
8 Manufacturing Process Replication (1) Why? Replication Technology Embossing Polymer substrate placed in system and heated up over T g Template structure heated up to T g or slightly higher Template structure pressed into polymer Template and substrate cooled down such that the substrate can be separated Injection Molding Molten polymer is forced under high pressure into a mild cavity Pellets conveyed forward by feeding screw, heated up such that there is molten polymer before the nozzle Polymer held in mold until solidification, then mold opens and the part is removed
10
9 Manufacturing Process Replication (2) Why? Replication Technology Thermoforming Heat polymer over T g (glass-liquid- transition temperature) Force hot material against counter of a mold Mechanical, air or vacuum pressure Simple and fast Casting Casting mostly on a silicon substrate Resolution of the method: approx. 50nm to 1µm Basic lab setup is compact and straightforward
11
10 Manufacturing Process Stereolithography Why? Stereolithography process Vat filled with photo curable liquid resin Laser operation and UV-induced solidification High-intensity laser beams Solidification only at focus point Platform is lowered by certain distance Next layer of the object is shaped until completion
12
11 Agenda Introduction Manufacturing Processes Applications Plastics and Polymers
13
12 Applications Plastic Applications Why? Plastic Applications Stretchable microsystems Micro fluid units and flow cells Microanalysis units Clinical chemistry and diagnostics Micro reactors and containers Cantilevers Polymer MEMS
14
13 References [1] Satoru Shoji* and Kyoko Masui Department of Applied Physics, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan Nano-/Microfabrication, Encyclopedia of Polymeric Nanomaterials DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-36199-9_108-2 [2]H. Becker, C. Ga ̈ rtner, Polymer microfabrication technologies for microfluidic systems, Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2008, 390, 89-111. [3]A. Manz, H. Becker (eds.), Microsystem technology in the life sciences, Springer, Berlin, 1998 [4]M. Madou, Fundamentals of Microfabrication and Nanotechnology, CRC Press, New York, 2012; 3rd edition [5]J. J. Brandner, 2011, published in Rossiiskii Khimicheskii Zhurnal, 2011, Vol. 55, No. 2, pp. 9–15 [6]O. Ro ̈ tting, W. Ro ̈ pke, H. Becker, C. Ga ̈ rtner, Polymer microfabrication Technology Microsystem Technologies 8 (2002) 32–36 Ó Springer-Verlag 2002 [7]http://www.cmst.be/groups/stretchablemicrosystems.html, 25 th November 2014http://www.cmst.be/groups/stretchablemicrosystems.html [8]J. Brandrup, E. H. Immergut, E. A. Grulke, Eric A. Grulke, D. Bloch, Polymer Handbook, 4th edition, 1999, Wiley Interscience [9]http://www.chemiereport.at/mikrochip-ersetzt-chemielabor, 25 th November 2014http://www.chemiereport.at/mikrochip-ersetzt-chemielabor
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.