Designing single-layer PDMS devices for micron to millimeter-scale deformations
Abstract
The elasticity of PDMS has played a central role in advancing important microfluidic technologies, ranging from early valves to sophisticated organ-on-a-chip systems. However, most deformable microfluidic devices are based on geometries that require complex multi-layer PDMS architectures and include thin membranes, leading to difficult microfabrication and poor stability. Recently, Jain, Belkadi et al. (Biofabrication 16.3 (2024): 035010) introduced a single-layer PDMS device in which a wide and long microfluidic channel was deformed by pressurizing two adjacent air chambers. While they demonstrated how the channel ceiling deformation can be leveraged to compress biological materials, it remains unknown how the device geometry influences this deformation. Here, a systematic numerical study is performed on 14,336 variants of this device, through which the height of the PDMS layer is identified as the main feature that determines the ceiling deformation. Three modes of channel deformation are identified as the geometry are varied: a U shape with a central minimum, a W shape with two minima and a central maximum, or an inverse U shape with an upward-bulging single maximum. The numerical results are validated in experiments that reproduce the three modes for the predicted geometries and demonstrate vertical ceiling deformations ranging from a few microns to the millimeter scale. The generality of this approach is demonstrated for two example applications: A fully closing single-layer microfluidic valve and an optical lens of controllable anisotropic magnification. This work leverages the rapid prototyping enabled by 3D printing or micro-milling to open new perspectives in microfluidic actuation.
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