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Development of Plug-and-Play 3D-Printed Micropneumatic Circuit Modules for Autonomous Control of Fluidic Devices

Date

2025-08-04

Author

Seow, Yen Ru Joanne

Abstract

This dissertation presents an exploration of the design, fabrication, and characterization of integrated pneumatic circuits for the precise control of microvalves within droplet-based microfluidic devices. By integrating these pneumatic logic elements, this research demonstrates automatic, on-chip control over aqueous-in-oil droplet generation in microfluidic devices. These findings advance the field of autonomous lab-on-a-chip systems by reducing reliance on electronic devices and programming languages, promoting the development of more compact, portable, and complex microfluidic devices for diverse applications. Chapter 1 introduces microfluidics as an analytical method which uses minute amounts of fluid, as well as fundamentals of microfluidics and droplet-based microfluidics. Valving on these devices is briefly discussed, followed by traditional and modern fabrication methods, including 3D printing. Chapter 2 focuses on the design and fabrication of basic pneumatic logic gates and their characteristics. It also introduces our plug-and-play pneumatic logic gates and our contributions to split-path logic gates. This chapter concludes by discussing our pneumatic multiplexer and diode design and their capabilities. Chapter 3 initiates the development of using a smartphone’s microphone as an instrument to collect high frequency data, mainly the sound from an exhaust of a pneumatic inverter gate while an oscillator is running. This chapter also describes how we analyzed the data collected with smartphones using Audacity, MATLAB, ImageJ, and Excel. Chapter 4 unveils how we constructed a pneumatic computer with only NOT and NAND gates, consisting of an oscillator, delay buffer, XOR gate, and AND gate. Droplets were created with a 3D-printed droplet generator using the pneumatic computer to control a valve on the device. Also, plug-and-play pneumatic buffers were used to permit manual control of droplet volumes with two nanoliter precision, without any electronic controllers. Chapter 5 covers micropumps and micromixers and how we leverage pneumatic oscillators to control 3D-printed mixers towards a bioanalytical chemistry application. These devices were customized for our electrochemical bowtie sensors and designed to reduce the mixing time of analyte and antibody in the assay workflow. Chapter 6 concludes this dissertation, including future directions for projects mentioned.