The control of materials in microscale quantities is of interest in a wide range of fields. A particular area of microscale material control that has drawn much attention is microfluidics. Heating techniques developed for use in microfluidic networks are problematic due to the requirement for efficiency in the localized heating of the individual droplets with minimal heat transfer to the surrounding area.
This technology is a method for precise local heating of small liquid volumes using magnetic porous Si microparticles. Dr. Sailor and his collaborators at UCSD have previously demonstrated that porous silicon photonic crystals can be engineered to have amphiphilic properties. Adding magnetite to the particles endows them with the ability to be manipulated with magnetic fields, providing a means to direct the motion of liquid droplets in microfluidics applications.
By application of an alternating magnetic field the properties of the porous Si particles are utilized for manipulating and heating the droplet. The particle includes a hydrophilic host layer with magnetic nanoparticles and a hydrophobic encoding layer that define a spectral code. The droplets can be therefore identified using a light spectrum reflected from the encoding layer. In addition, the particle structure allows an efficient heat transfer from the magnetic layer to the droplet.
Tagging, manipulating and heating small volumes of liquids.
The small size of the particles facilitates ready incorporation into various hosts, e.g. test kits, assays, powders, liquids, glass, paper, and in vivo detection is enabled by the biocompatible silicon particles. The technology has a variety of applications, including:
This technology is offered exclusively or nonexclusively in the US and/or worldwide territories. A commercial sponsor for potential future research is sought.
Michael J. Sailor, Ph.D., is Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UCSD.
Country | Type | Number | Dated | Case |
United States Of America | Issued Patent | 8,377,147 | 02/19/2013 | 2006-176 |
heating, discrete, droplet, magnetic, porous, silicon, photonic, crystals, microfluidics, microparticles