Abstract
A simple microfluidic control method that uses a piezoelectric dispenser head is developed to fabricate microdots. A glycerol mixture was used as the test fluid to simulate conductive metallic solutions. The orifice diameter of the dispenser was 50 μm. Investigations were conducted at room temperature (25 °C). For each bipolar waveform, fluid was extruded in the form of a stretching liquid column, which eventually retracted into the dispenser orifice. Microdots were obtained by governing the liquid transfer process between the dispenser orifice and the target surface, where the gap was smaller than the maximum extrusion length during liquid column formation. Three fluid behaviors were observed using high-speed imaging, namely extrusion, impact on the target surface, and pinch-offof liquid ligament. For gaps of below 70 °m, some of the fluid sticking on the target surface resulted in a microdot diameter of 26 °m (about half of the orifice diameter).
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CITATION STYLE
Tsai, H. L., Hwang, W. S., Wang, J. K., Peng, W. C., & Chen, S. H. (2015). Fabrication of microdots using piezoelectric dispensing technique for viscous fluids. Materials, 8(10), 7006–7016. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma8105355
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