Fabrication of magnetically actuated fluidic drug delivery device using polyvinyl chloride adhesive stencils

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Abstract

In this paper, a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) fabrication method is introduced. It eliminates the need for conventional fabrication methods, such as photolithography and etching. Only a series of oxygen plasma treatments, silanization, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) adhesive stencils were used to develop multi-layer designs. The fabrication method was applied to fabricate a PDMS-based drug delivery device with an actively controllable, magnetically actuated valve. Above all, this fabrication method eliminated the use of a power-consuming pump. Fluidic substanceswere injected into the circular shaped primary chamber through a syringe. A secondary chamber, similar to the primary chamber's structure but with a smaller radius and thinner membrane, was connected via a microchannel to regulate the amount released. When actuated with a permanent magnet for one second, the volume in the secondary chamber first depletes. As the magnet is removed, the valve closes. Subsequently, the primary chamber replenishes the secondary chamber. This process can be repeated until the primary chamber reaches a saturation state that can no longer inflate the secondary chamber. The device could release a fewmicroliters per actuation. Various combinations of size and thickness of primary, and secondary chambers can realize release rate of desired amount.

Original languageEnglish
Article number358
JournalMicromachines
Volume9
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2018

Keywords

  • Controlled release rate
  • Fluidic drug delivery device
  • Magnetically actuated microfluidic device
  • Polydimethylsiloxane fabrication
  • Polyvinyl chloride adhesive stencil

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