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Porous Silicon Microbioreactors - Applications and Technology

Bengtsson, Martin LU (2004)
Abstract
Microfluidic systems have become one of the most interesting fields in the research of chemical analysis. Miniaturized systems exhibit numerous practical advantages when compared with traditional batch-scale synthesis such as lower sample volumes, increased control of the reactions and higher sample throughput. This thesis describes the development and applications of a parallel channel microreactor in porous silicon. The microreactor is fabricated by anisotropic etching in <110>-silicon and subsequently made porous by anodising in an HF electrolyte. In various designs the microreactor has been used in different miniaturized analysis systems. Both as an enzyme reactor with immobilised trypsin for protein digestion in a miniaturized... (More)
Microfluidic systems have become one of the most interesting fields in the research of chemical analysis. Miniaturized systems exhibit numerous practical advantages when compared with traditional batch-scale synthesis such as lower sample volumes, increased control of the reactions and higher sample throughput. This thesis describes the development and applications of a parallel channel microreactor in porous silicon. The microreactor is fabricated by anisotropic etching in <110>-silicon and subsequently made porous by anodising in an HF electrolyte. In various designs the microreactor has been used in different miniaturized analysis systems. Both as an enzyme reactor with immobilised trypsin for protein digestion in a miniaturized sample handling system for protein identification with MALDI-TOF MS, and with immobilised yeast cells in a system for handling and monitoring of cell-released products from living cells. In order to minimise internal mass transport limitations in the microreactor, the porous morphology has been varied, both by altering the overall design of the reactor structure, and by varying the anodisation conditions. This has been done for two different enzymes to illustrate the need to adapt the porous matrix to different substrate molecules. To enhance the external mass transport, the transport of substrate from the main flow to the immobilised walls, acoustic streaming was evaluated as a way to induce vortex flows in the channel. The microreactor sensitivity of fabrication errors and blocking of the channels was investigated by fabricating reactors with different channel width distributions and valuate their performance. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Professor Jensen, Klavs F, USA
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Elektroteknik, Electrical engineering, immobilised cells, enzyme reactor, micro fluidics, Microreactor, porous silicon
pages
134 pages
defense location
Room E:1406, E-building, Lund Institute of Technology
defense date
2004-04-23 10:15:00
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
1e881741-2c1b-4911-b7da-2cb917e25cf6 (old id 466836)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 09:22:22
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:52:37
@phdthesis{1e881741-2c1b-4911-b7da-2cb917e25cf6,
  abstract     = {{Microfluidic systems have become one of the most interesting fields in the research of chemical analysis. Miniaturized systems exhibit numerous practical advantages when compared with traditional batch-scale synthesis such as lower sample volumes, increased control of the reactions and higher sample throughput. This thesis describes the development and applications of a parallel channel microreactor in porous silicon. The microreactor is fabricated by anisotropic etching in &lt;110&gt;-silicon and subsequently made porous by anodising in an HF electrolyte. In various designs the microreactor has been used in different miniaturized analysis systems. Both as an enzyme reactor with immobilised trypsin for protein digestion in a miniaturized sample handling system for protein identification with MALDI-TOF MS, and with immobilised yeast cells in a system for handling and monitoring of cell-released products from living cells. In order to minimise internal mass transport limitations in the microreactor, the porous morphology has been varied, both by altering the overall design of the reactor structure, and by varying the anodisation conditions. This has been done for two different enzymes to illustrate the need to adapt the porous matrix to different substrate molecules. To enhance the external mass transport, the transport of substrate from the main flow to the immobilised walls, acoustic streaming was evaluated as a way to induce vortex flows in the channel. The microreactor sensitivity of fabrication errors and blocking of the channels was investigated by fabricating reactors with different channel width distributions and valuate their performance.}},
  author       = {{Bengtsson, Martin}},
  keywords     = {{Elektroteknik; Electrical engineering; immobilised cells; enzyme reactor; micro fluidics; Microreactor; porous silicon}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Porous Silicon Microbioreactors - Applications and Technology}},
  year         = {{2004}},
}