Title :
Air to liquid sample collection devices using microfluidic gas/liquid interfaces
Author :
Greenwood, Jason ; Cheng, Daming ; Liu, Ye ; Jiang, Hongrui
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI
Abstract :
We demonstrate methods for collecting gaseous and aerosolized particles into microfluidic channels. Surface tension creates gas-liquid interfaces to permit an analyte to transfer from a gaseous environment to a liquid microfluidic channel. In one device, hydrophobic/hydrophilic boundaries create a virtual channel of liquid in which analyte is collected. In the other device, pinning points create circular pillars of air within a mircofluidic channel. Multiple methods demonstrate feasibility of these devices. Nesslerpsilas Reagent (NR) with gaseous ammonia (NH3) showed the real-time and collection-for-later-analysis acquisition abilities. Deionized (DI) water with varying concentrations of gaseous ammonia (30%, 15%, and 7.5%) showed that the devices proportionally changed impedance (~50% per step) in real-time. Aerosolized solid particles showed that these devices were also able to collect larger sample analytes.
Keywords :
aerosols; ammonia; flow measurement; microchannel flow; two-phase flow; Nessler reagent; air to liquid sample collection devices; collection-for-later-analysis acquisition abilities; deionized water; gaseous ammonia; hydrophobic/hydrophilic boundaries; microfluidic channels; microfluidic gas/liquid interfaces; surface tension; Atmosphere; Computer interfaces; Fabrication; Glass; Gold; Impedance; Microfluidics; Microscopy; Surface tension; Surface treatment;
Conference_Titel :
Sensors, 2008 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Lecce
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2580-8
Electronic_ISBN :
1930-0395
DOI :
10.1109/ICSENS.2008.4716543