Microfluidic  devices have been hailed as the technology that will revolutionise  areas such as diagnostics in medicine, food safety, drug development and  genetic sequencing since their conception in the late 1980s. However, a  limiting factor in translating neat microfluidic ideas to practical,  portable devices has been integrating all the necessary  components. The microfluidic chip may be small and perfectly formed, but  the power source, pumps and control electronics for sample analysis are  often external, bulky components – existing in the macroscale rather  than the microscale.
Now, a team led by Neus Sabaté at the  Institute of Microelectronics of Barcelona has integrated a micro direct  methanol fuel cell into a microfluidic platform, which is capable of  producing up to 4mW, sufficient to power the device. The carbon dioxide  produced as a by-product of the fuel cell reaction is used to push  liquids through the microchannels, removing the need for an external  pump. The team has shown that by controlling the fuel cell operating  conditions, they can control the flow rate of the liquid, which bears an  almost linear relationship to the current generated in the device.
Jonathan  Cooper, an expert in lab-on-a-chip technologies from the University of  Glasgow, UK, comments: ‘A real strength of this work is the excellent  job the researchers have done in integrating and packaging the device to  show a working prototype. The flow rates are high enough for devices to  function for several minutes and the device offers the prospect of  enabling autonomous functionality on chip.’
The next step for  Sabaté is to show that the device can truly function independently. ‘We  are trying to prove that we can indeed perform measurements on analytes  by integrating a low power electronic chip module and amperometric  sensors,’ she says.  Her team is also working on higher degrees of  device integration by fabricating them from just one type of polymer and  experimenting with different fuels such as glucose.
Fuel cell-powered microfluidic platform for lab-on-a-chip applications
Juan Pablo Esquivel, Marc Castellarnau, Tobias Senn, Bernd Löchel, Josep Samitier and Neus Sabaté
DOI: 10.1039/C1LC20426B
Read the original article in Chemistry World