FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
ACS News Service Weekly PressPac: February 17, 2010
Stitching together lab-on-a-chip devices with cotton thread and sewing needles
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ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Scientists in Australia are reporting the first use of ordinary cotton thread and sewing needles to literally stitch together a microfluidic analytical device 鈥� microscopic technology that can transport fluids for medical tests and other purposes in a lab-on-a-chip. The chips shrink room-sized diagnostic testing equipment down to the size of a postage stamp, and promise revolutionary applications in medicine, environmental sensing, and other areas. Their study is in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, a monthly journal: 鈥�.鈥�
Wei Shen and colleagues note that the development of low-cost 鈥渓ab-on-a-chip鈥� diagnostic tests has become an attractive area of research. Existing devices require etching microscopic channels onto slivers of silicon, glass, ceramics, or metal in a costly, complicated process. The scientists set out to find an alternative, and did so with cotton thread, which wicks fluids along its tiny fibers.
They stitched thread into paper to form microfluidic sensors capable of detecting and measuring substances released in the urine of patients with several human medical conditions. 鈥淭he fabrication of thread-based microfluidic devices is simple and relatively low cost because it requires only sewing needles or household sewing machines," the report said. "Our results demonstrate that thread is a suitable material for fabricating microfluidic diagnostic devices for monitoring human health, environment and food safety, especially for the population in less-industrialized areas or remote regions.鈥�
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provides a simple way to transport fluids for
low-cost 鈥渓ab-on-a-chip鈥� tests for detecting
disease and other purposes.
Credit: Wei Shen
(High-resolution version)