Hybrid Printing of Fully Integrated Microfluidic Devices for Biosensing

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Abstract

The advent of 3D printing has facilitated the rapid fabrication of microfluidic devices that are accessible and cost-effective. However, it remains a challenge to fabricate sophisticated microfluidic devices with integrated structural and functional components due to limited material options of existing printing methods and their stringent requirement on feedstock material properties. Here, a multi-materials multi-scale hybrid printing method that enables seamless integration of a broad range of structural and functional materials into complex devices is reported. A fully printed and assembly-free microfluidic biosensor with embedded fluidic channels and functionalized electrodes at sub-100 µm spatial resolution for the amperometric sensing of lactate in sweat is demonstrated. The sensors present a sensitive response with a limit of detection of 442 nm and a linear dynamic range of 1–10 mm, which are performance characteristics relevant to physiological levels of lactate in sweat. The versatile hybrid printing method offers a new pathway toward facile fabrication of next-generation integrated devices for broad applications in point-of-care health monitoring and sensing.

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APA

Du, Y., Reitemeier, J., Jiang, Q., Bappy, M. O., Bohn, P. W., & Zhang, Y. (2024). Hybrid Printing of Fully Integrated Microfluidic Devices for Biosensing. Small, 20(5). https://doi.org/10.1002/smll.202304966

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