Spatially variable dielectric layers for digital microfluidics
11554374 · 2023-01-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01L3/502792
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2200/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/16
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L2300/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01L3/502784
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A digital microfluidic device including an active matrix of propulsion electrodes controlled by thin-film-transistors. The device includes at least two areas of different propulsion electrode densities. One area may be driven by directly-driving the propulsion electrodes from a power supply or function generator. In the first, higher density region; a first dielectric layer covers the propulsion electrodes. The first dielectric layer has a first dielectric constant and a first thickness. In the second, lower density region, a second dielectric layer has a second dielectric constant and a second thickness covering the propulsion electrodes.
Claims
1. A digital microfluidic device, comprising: a first plurality of electrodes having a first density and operatively coupled to a set of switches; a controller operatively coupled to the set of switches and configured to provide a propulsion voltage to at least a portion of the first plurality of electrodes; a second plurality of electrodes having a second density and configured to operate at a higher voltage than the propulsion voltage of the first plurality of electrodes; a first dielectric layer having a first dielectric constant and a first thickness, the first dielectric layer covering the first plurality of electrodes, and a second dielectric layer having a second dielectric constant and a second thickness, the second dielectric layer covering the second plurality of electrodes.
2. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first density of the first plurality of electrodes is greater than the second density of the second plurality of electrodes.
3. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first dielectric constant of the first dielectric layer is greater than the second dielectric constant of the second dielectric layer.
4. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first thickness of the first dielectric layer is smaller than the second thickness of the second dielectric layer.
5. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first dielectric layer and the second dielectric layer are mutually overlapping in part.
6. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, further comprising a third plurality of reservoir electrodes configured to operate at a higher voltage than the propulsion voltage of the first plurality of electrodes.
7. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first plurality of electrodes is configured to operate at a potential between about 10 V and about 20 V.
8. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the second plurality of electrodes is configured to operate at a potential between about 100 V and about 300 V.
9. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first dielectric layer has a thickness between about 50 nm to about 250 nm.
10. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the second dielectric layer has a thickness between about 500 nm to about 5 μm.
11. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first plurality of electrodes is configured to operate at a first frequency and the second plurality of electrodes is configured to operate at a second frequency.
12. The digital microfluidic device of claim 11, wherein the first frequency of operation of the first plurality of electrodes is smaller than the second frequency of operation of the second plurality of electrodes.
13. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the switches are thin-film-transistors.
14. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the switches are electro-mechanical switches.
15. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the first dielectric layer comprises silicon dioxide, silicon nitride, hafnium oxide, alumina, tantalum oxide, or barium strontium titanate.
16. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the second dielectric layer comprises parylene, ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), titanium dioxide, or aluminum oxide.
17. The digital microfluidic device of claim 1, wherein the second dielectric comprises a combination of layered materials selected from the group consisting of silicon dioxide, silicon nitride, hafnium oxide, alumina, tantalum oxide, barium strontium titanate, parylene, ethylene tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE), polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), titanium dioxide, and aluminum oxide.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(6) As disclosed herein, the invention provides active matrix electrowetting on dielectric (AM-EWoD) devices that include a spatially variable dielectric structure. Accordingly, much greater voltages may be imposed in higher dielectric breakdown regions (e.g. reservoirs covered with thicker dielectric) than in the main array areas (e.g., TFT pixels). This architecture allows different driving schemes to be used within different regions of the EWoD device according to their dielectric properties. In some instances, the higher thickness robust dielectric may be removed and re-applied to the reservoir or adjacent regions. This design enables recycling these regions after they get fully fatigued, thereby extending the longevity of the device.
(7) The use of spatially variable dielectrics across wide regions of an AM-EWoD device allows for different voltages and/or waveforms to be applied independently across the device in specialized areas. Also addressed is the issue of fatigue and breakdown by allowing higher stress regions to operate with thicker dielectrics at higher voltages while preventing catastrophic device failure. Moreover, a variable dielectric structure enables actuation strength increases in reservoir regions, which makes it easier to overcome capillary forces from fluid input systems. Because it is possible to increase the actuation strength with higher applied voltages, droplets from a reservoir have more predictable snap-off, which helps to regulate the volume of each droplet of reservoir fluid. Additionally, the higher actuation strength expands the range of materials that can be introduced from the reservoir onto the device.
(8) In general, thicker dielectrics operating at higher voltages are more resistant to fatigue, while thinner dielectrics that are inherently more complex and fragile tend to fail more readily under electrical load. Furthermore, the minimum voltage required for actuation scales as the inverse square root of the capacitance, or proportionately to the square root of the thickness. Thus, operation at lower voltages (desirable for using high density TFT arrays) is challenging to achieve with variations in dielectric thickness alone. Likewise, using materials with increased dielectric constant requires complex deposition processes and inherent issues related to leakage due to mid-gap electronic states, structural deformities, and other factors.
(9) The fundamental structure of an exemplary EWoD device is illustrated in the cross-sectional image of
(10) When a voltage differential is applied between adjacent electrodes, the voltage on one electrode attracts opposite charges in the droplet at the dielectric-to-droplet interface, and the droplet moves toward this electrode, also as illustrated in
(11) Returning to
(12) As shown in
(13)
(14) Equation (1) establishes the relationship between actuated contact angle θ, resting contact angle θ.sub.0, per-area capacitance C, voltage V and liquid/environment surface tension γ:
(15)
(16) EWoD performance is highly dependent on the difference between resting and actuated contact angles (θ−θ.sub.0). The capacitance per unit area C is a function of dielectric constant E and dielectric thickness d according to Equation (2)
(17)
It can be seen that, in order to increases the extent of actuation, it is desirable to have one or more of a high dielectric constant, a low thickness, and a high voltage.
(18) One can envision tuning the parameter space such that the EWoD device operates at 75% of the breakdown voltage V.sub.B, such that V=0.75.Math.V.sub.B. Then, a relationship with the breakdown voltage can be seen in Equation (3), where F represents an actuation efficacy proportional to the difference in contact angles, and V.sub.B is expressed as the dielectric thickness d multiplied by the dielectric strength D.sub.S, V.sub.B=D.sub.S.Math.d:
(19)
It can be seen that the actuation efficacy increases at higher thicknesses and voltages, assuming operating voltages close to V.sub.B and that this benefit is not exactly offset by a decrease in permittivity for the thicker dielectric.
(20) Equation (4) reflects that the minimum voltage V.sub.min is directly proportional to the square root of the dielectric thickness d in view of Equation (2), α being hysteresis of wetting and de-wetting:
(21)
This shows why operating at low voltages is quite difficult due to a need for aggressively reducing dielectric thickness or increasing dielectric permittivity. The dielectric thickness required to work at comparatively lower voltage ranges (e.g., about 10 V) results in a device much more prone to fatigue and failure. It has also been found that high thickness dielectrics operating at high voltage ranges tend to be more robust and provide large actuated contact angles compared to traditional, low-voltage platforms on thin film transistors (TFT).
(22) Example higher-stress EWoD operations include reservoir regions featuring special electrode patterns as well as designated moderate-density electrode regions for low-resolution operations. An example of a reservoir region having specialty electrodes is exemplified in
(23)
(24) As an alternative, as shown in
(25)
(26) Dielectric layers may be manufactured with deposition methods commonly used in the art, for example sputtering, atomic layer deposition (ALD), spin coating, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), and other vacuum deposition techniques. Creating spatial profiles featuring two or more dielectrics of different materials and thickness may be achieved through, for instance, shadow masking, photolithography, and dry or wet etching techniques. If desired, the high dielectric thickness areas may be stripped for re-use since their robustness enables them to hold up much better to repeated actuation.
(27) It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that numerous changes and modifications can be made in the specific embodiments of the invention described above without departing from the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the whole of the foregoing description is to be interpreted in an illustrative and not in a limitative sense.