fikst
Mechanical
- Mar 14, 2014
- 2
Hi all,
I'm new to the forums here but I was hoping to get some help finding an elastomer that will work for our application. The material will be part of a microfluidic device and needs the following properties:
Soft - We need to be able to collapse tiny channels in the device with a plastic roller
Wear resistant - The channels will be repeatedly collapsed and expanded by a rotating mechanical system. The material will need to hold up to wear from the rotating parts.
Bio-compatbile - The material cannot be poisonous to cells
Bondable - We need to be able to attach two sheets of elastomer through some bonding method (could be solvent or plasma based, we are trying to stay away from adhesives if possible)
Low gas permeability
Ideally the material would also be clear but that is not a requirement. In the past we have experiment with PDMS and SEBS. The PDMS gave us issues with bonding and gas permeability and the SEBS ended up wearing far too quickly. I apologize for being a bit vague but the product itself is proprietary. Also, I know that these requirements are a bit conflicting and we would be open to the using some kind of multi-layer setup if necessary. Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks!
I'm new to the forums here but I was hoping to get some help finding an elastomer that will work for our application. The material will be part of a microfluidic device and needs the following properties:
Soft - We need to be able to collapse tiny channels in the device with a plastic roller
Wear resistant - The channels will be repeatedly collapsed and expanded by a rotating mechanical system. The material will need to hold up to wear from the rotating parts.
Bio-compatbile - The material cannot be poisonous to cells
Bondable - We need to be able to attach two sheets of elastomer through some bonding method (could be solvent or plasma based, we are trying to stay away from adhesives if possible)
Low gas permeability
Ideally the material would also be clear but that is not a requirement. In the past we have experiment with PDMS and SEBS. The PDMS gave us issues with bonding and gas permeability and the SEBS ended up wearing far too quickly. I apologize for being a bit vague but the product itself is proprietary. Also, I know that these requirements are a bit conflicting and we would be open to the using some kind of multi-layer setup if necessary. Any help would be appreciated!
Thanks!