A temperature-controllable microelectrode and its application to protein immobilization

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Abstract

This letter presents a smart integrated microfluidic device which can be applied to actively immobilize proteins on demand The active component in the device is a temperature-controllable microelectrode array with a smart polymer film, poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAAm) which can be thermally switched between hydrophilic and hydrophobic states. It is integrated into a micro hot diaphragm having an integrated micro heater and temperature sensors on a 2-micrometer-thick silicon oxide/silicon nitride/silicon oxide (O/N/O) template. Only 36 mW is required to heat the large template area of 2 mm×16 mm to 40°C within 1 second. To relay the stimulus-response activity to the microelectrode surface, the interface is modified with a smart polymer. For a model biomolecular affinity test, an anti-6-(2, 4-dinitrophenyl) aminohexanoic acid (DNP) antibody protein immobilization on the microelectrodes is demonstrated by fluorescence patterns.

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APA

Lee, D. S., Choi, H. G., Chung, K. H., Lee, B. Y., Pyo, H. B., & Yoon, H. C. (2007). A temperature-controllable microelectrode and its application to protein immobilization. ETRI Journal, 29(5), 667–669. https://doi.org/10.4218/etrij.07.0207.0035

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