Lithography-free centimeter-long nanochannel fabrication method using an electrospun nanofiber array
- Authors
- Park, Suk Hee; Shin, Hyun-Jun; Kim, Yong-Hwan; Yang, Dong-Yol; Lee, Jong-Chul; Lee, Sangyoup
- Issue Date
- 2012-09
- Publisher
- IOP PUBLISHING LTD
- Citation
- JOURNAL OF MICROMECHANICS AND MICROENGINEERING, v.22, no.9
- Abstract
- Novel cost-effective methods for polymeric and metallic nanochannel fabrication have been demonstrated using an electrospun nanofiber array. Like other electrospun nanofiber-based nanofabrication methods, our system also showed high throughput as well as cost-effective performances. Unlike other systems, however, our fabrication scheme provides a pseudo-parallel nanofiber array a few centimeters long at a speed of several tens of fibers per second based on our unique inclined-gap fiber collecting system. Pseudo-parallel nanofiber arrays were used either directly for the PDMS molding process or for the metal lift-off process followed by the SiO2 deposition process to produce the nanochannel array. While the PDMS molding process was a simple fabrication based on one-step casting, the metal lift-off process followed by SiO2 deposition allowed finetuning on height and width of nanogrooves down to subhundred nanometers from a few micrometers. Nanogrooves were covered either with cover glass or with PDMS slab and nanochannel connectivity was investigated with a fluorescent dye. Also, nanochannel arrays were used to investigate mobility and conformations of lambda-DNA.
- Keywords
- POLYMER NANOFIBERS; DNA-MOLECULES; NANOFLUIDIC DEVICES; BEAM LITHOGRAPHY; MANIPULATION; DIAMETER; NANOSLIT; FIBERS; POLYMER NANOFIBERS; DNA-MOLECULES; NANOFLUIDIC DEVICES; BEAM LITHOGRAPHY; MANIPULATION; DIAMETER; NANOSLIT; FIBERS
- ISSN
- 0960-1317
- URI
- https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/128911
- DOI
- 10.1088/0960-1317/22/9/095019
- Appears in Collections:
- KIST Article > 2012
- Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
- Export
- RIS (EndNote)
- XLS (Excel)
- XML
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.