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Microwave-induced Adjustable Nonlinear Temperature Gradients in Microfluidic Devices

NCJ Number
310150
Author(s)
Jayna J Shah; Jon Geist; Michael Gaitan
Date Published
September 2010
Annotation

This paper describes a technique that has potential to benefit biological, chemical, and physical applications that require rapid temperature gradients.

Abstract

The authors describe on-chip microwave generation of spatial temperature gradients in a polymeric microfluidic device that includes an integrated microstrip transmission line. The transmission line was fabricated photolithographically on commercially available adhesive copper tape. The fluid temperature during microwave heating was measured by observing the temperature-dependent fluorescence intensity of a dye solution in the microchannel. Large interference effects, which were produced by superposition of a sinusoidal and two exponential temperature distributions, were measured at 12 GHz and 19 GHz. Temperature extremes of 31 °C and 53 °C at the minimum and maximum of the sinusoid were established within 1 s. The sinusoid also produced a quasilinear temperature gradient along a 2 mm distance with a slope of 7.3 °C mm−1. This technique has the potential to benefit many biological, chemical, and physical applications requiring rapid temperature gradients. (Published Abstract Provided)

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