Reconfigurable microvalve optical waveguide
10875020 ยท 2020-12-29
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01N15/1436
PHYSICS
F16K99/0015
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B6/3536
PHYSICS
F16K99/0034
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02B6/2804
PHYSICS
G01N2015/1454
PHYSICS
B01L3/502738
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/0668
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G01N15/1456
PHYSICS
F16K99/0059
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01L2400/0481
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F16K99/0011
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F16K2099/0084
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01L2300/0816
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01L3/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G02B6/28
PHYSICS
F16K99/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
An optical waveguide comprises multiple layers of solid-state material disposed on a substrate. One of the layers is a lifting-gate valve made of a high refractive index material. The device provides for better optical confinement in microfluidic channels, and has the capability to integrate both optical signals and fluid sample processing. The optical paths on the chip are reconfigurable because of the use of a movable microvalve that guides light in one of its positions.
Claims
1. An optical waveguide (300), comprising: a substrate (310) characterized by a first refractive index; a pneumatic layer (330) disposed on the substrate and characterized by a second refractive index; a channel (340) between the substrate and the pneumatic layer and configured to receive a sample fluid; a pneumatically actuated micro-valve (320) comprising a gate (320a) characterized by a third refractive index, wherein the third refractive index is greater than the first refractive index and the second refractive index; and an optical channel (450) configured to guide an optical signal between the substrate and the pneumatic layer transversely to the channel; wherein the micro-valve is configured to be pneumatically actuated to switch from a first state in which the gate is positioned to block fluid flow in the channel, and a second state in which the gate is sufficiently withdrawn from the channel to permit fluid flow in the channel; and wherein the gate is configured for guiding the optical signal transversely through the channel when in the first state.
2. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the substrate comprises at least one of silicon, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), or glass.
3. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the pneumatic layer comprises at least one of SiO2, SiN, or polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS).
4. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as an on-off switch (410).
5. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as an optical signal splitter (412).
6. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as a multi-mode interferometer (MMI, 430).
7. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to function as a physical trap (435) for particles that can then be interrogated using light.
8. The optical waveguide of claim 7, wherein a lifting-gate valve has the topological shape of a ring, and is configured to physically enclose the particles, and wherein light is carried to or collected from the enclosed area by one or more waveguides.
9. The optical waveguide of claim 1, wherein the substrate comprises at least one of silicon, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), or glass; wherein the pneumatic layer comprises at least one of SiO2, SiN, or polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS); and wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as one of an on-off switch (410), an optical signal splitter (412), a multi-mode interferometer (MMI, 430), and a physical trap (435) for particles that can then be interrogated using light.
10. A method for operating an optical waveguide (300), comprising: injecting an optical signal into the optical waveguide, wherein the optical waveguide comprises a substrate (310) characterized by a first refractive index; a pneumatic layer (330) disposed on the substrate and characterized by a second refractive index; a channel (340) between the substrate and the pneumatic layer and configured to receive a sample fluid; a pneumatically actuated micro-valve (320) comprising a gate (320a) characterized by a third refractive index, wherein the third refractive index is greater than the first refractive index and the second refractive index; and an optical channel (450) configured to guide the optical signal between the substrate and the pneumatic layer transversely to the channel; pneumatically actuating the micro-valve to switch from a state in which the gate is sufficiently withdrawn from the channel to permit fluid flow in the channel to a state in which the gate is positioned to block fluid flow in the channel; and guiding the optical signal transversely through the channel when the gate is positioned to block fluid flow in the channel.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the substrate comprises at least one of silicon, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), or glass.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the pneumatic layer comprises at least one of SiO2, SiN, or polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS).
13. The method of claim 10, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as an on-off switch (410).
14. The method of claim 10, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as an optical signal splitter (412).
15. The method of claim 10, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as a multi-mode interferometer (MMI, 430).
16. The method of claim 10, wherein the optical waveguide is configured to function as a physical trap (435) for particles that can then be interrogated using light.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein a lifting-gate valve has the topological shape of a ring, and is configured to physically enclose the particles, and wherein light is carried to or collected from the enclosed area by one or more waveguides.
18. The method of claim 10, wherein the substrate comprises at least one of silicon, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), or glass; wherein the pneumatic layer comprises at least one of SiO2, SiN, or polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS); and wherein the optical waveguide is configured to actuate the micro-valve to function as one of an on-off switch (410), an optical signal splitter (412), a multi-mode interferometer (MMI, 430), and a physical trap (435) for particles that can then be interrogated using light.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
(30) The present invention relates to the field of integrated optics, and more particularly to an optical waveguide comprising multiple layers of solid-state material disposed on a substrate, wherein one of the layers is a pneumatically actuated micro-valve (an example of which is a lifting-gate valve) made of a high refractive index material. The present invention introduces concepts for directing and providing better optical signal confinement in microfluidic channels. Specifically, the present invention introduces a single microvalve optical waveguide device that has the capability to integrate both optical signals and sample processing.
(31) In the following subsections, we discuss our inventive methods for fabricating lifting-gate valves using high refractive index materials, and our inventive flexible optofluidic waveguide platform with multi-dimensional reconfigurability. The disclosed methods for fabricating lifting-gate valves are discussed with reference to
(32) Fabricating Lifting-Gate Using a High Refractive Index Material
(33) In one embodiment, improvement in the confinement of optical signals in an optical waveguide device includes the usage of a high refractive index material. The key material here is the high refractive index, which is strategically fabricated in a lifting-gate valve. This allows optical signals to be re-directed or re-distributed as signals flow through the channels of the optical waveguide. With more control of the signals that flow through the channels, the confinement of the signals in the channels is improved.
(34) Fabrication of the lifting-gate valve may be achieved by bonding high and low-index layers together. Alternatively, spinning the low-index layer on top of the structured high-index layer would also provide for a dual layer of lifting-gate valves where light can be re-directed to a different layer in the optical waveguide. This refers to a lifting gate comprising a high and low index region, in which case one can implement the gate by making these two layers separately and bonding them with UV light or oxygen plasma (i.e., PDMS bonding), or by patterning the lower high index layer and then adding the second layer directly on top. This can be done by dropping the liquid precursor material on top and then spinning the whole thing rapidly. This creates a thin layer of uniform thickness, which can be controlled by spin duration and speed.
(35) With high refraction index material fabricated in the lifting-gate valves, optical waveguides can be dropped into the channels of the device to create new light paths on the fly. These lifting-gate valves may be operated by the same pneumatic controls already used for the sample preparation valves.
(36) Several embodiments are discussed below and with reference to the attached drawings. These descriptions and drawings are for explanatory purposes and do not exhaustively represent all combinations of waveguide configurations and mechanical assemblies provided by this invention. Those of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate that many other variations could be derived from these descriptions and the cited technical findings.
(37) An exemplary embodiment of the invention is represented in
(38) The optical waveguide 300 may be configured as an anti-resonant reflecting optical waveguide (ARROW) waveguide, slot waveguide, hollow-core photonic crystal fiber, omniguide, dual-hollow-core waveguide, or Bragg waveguide. Furthermore, the substrate 310 may comprise silicon, PDMS, or glass material. And the pneumatic and fluidic layers 330, 320 may comprise SiO2 and SiN or PDMS material. The lifting-gate valve 320 in
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(44) Flexible Optofluidic Waveguide Platform with Multi-Dimensional Reconfigrrability
(45) We will now discuss our new optofluidic platform that provides both multi-modal photonic reconfiguration and advanced fluidic sample handling in a single chip. On-chip photonic devices are based on a combination of solid-core and liquid-core PDMS waveguides as shown in
(46) In order to demonstrate the physical implementation of the PDMS waveguide platform and the ability to tune an optical device using both fluid control and pressure, we first consider a multi-mode interference (MMI) waveguide..sup.26 MMIs create length and wavelength dependent spot patterns upon propagation of multiple waveguide modes, and have recently been used to implement spectrally multiplexed detection of single viruses flowing through intersecting fluidic channels..sup.21 Our liquid-core optofluidic MMI is schematically shown in
(47) The multimode interference leads to the formation of N images of the input mode for a given length, L, and pressure, P, according to
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(49) This pattern formation is visualized in
(50) Next, we turn to dynamic tuning of these optofluidic elements. The first mechanism is through replacement of guiding liquid, i.e the waveguide core refractive index, n.sub.c.
(51) Thin sidewalls made from a pliable material (PDMS) allow for controlling a microfluidic channel's width through both inward and outward pressure..sup.28 Here, we use this principle for pressure-based dynamic tuning of the optofluidic MMI devices. Inward pneumatic pressure applied to the side channels causes a decrease in the MMI width, (
(52) We now turn to introducing a new approach for a fullyoptically and fluidicallyreconfigurable optofluidic platform. At its heart is an actuatable microvalve that simultaneously acts as an optical waveguide and actively moderates fluid flow, dubbed here as a lightvalve. Our implementation is based on lifting-gate microvalves that have been used in microfluidic devices for complex bioassays..sup.29,30
(53) The obvious Litmus test for photonic functionality of the lightvalve is operation as an on-off switch, which is reported in
(54) Next, we analyzed the on-off optical switching efficiency for different length lightvalves operated in lift-up mode. The results are displayed in
(55) Push-down operation, on the other hand, is relatively length-independent as it relies only on deformation of the waveguide structure at the beginning of the lightvalve, which leads to poor mode coupling between the excitation and valve waveguides.
(56) Finally, we demonstrate an implementation of the lightvalve as a functional element that unites both fluid handling and photonic functions of a bio-detection assay. To this end, the lightvalve is built as an annular structure shown schematically in
(57) Lastly, we demonstrate the lightvalve trap's ability to analyze single, trapped bioparticleshere, fluorescently stained E. coli bacteria.
(58) In summary, we have introduced a new optofluidic platform that seamlessly marries optical and fluidic functions in a single chip. Based on combining solid- and liquid-core PDMS waveguides whose fabrication is compatible with purely microfluidic chips, we created devices that offer multi-modal photonic reconfigurability using core liquids, mechanical pressure and motion. The potential of this approach was illustrated using widely tunable liquid-core MMI waveguides and by the introduction of novel lightvalves that regulate both liquid and light flow. Extremely efficient optical switching and definition of physical particle traps for optical analysis were demonstrated. The fluidic valve shape and optical pathways created by the lightvalve can be designed independently and with great flexibility, making the lightvalve a powerful building block for future optofluidic devices.
(59) While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, various modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustration and not limitation.
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