A Hybrid Microwave Source and Irradiator for Biological Lab On a Chip Applications.
ORAL
Abstract
Using a standard lithographic process, we have built a hybrid microwave irradiator for use in microwave enhanced chemistry and localized, rapid heating. The device combines a 100mW microwave source with a near field antenna to produce an entirely on-chip system for delivering microwave energy into a thin($<$100$\mu $m) layer above a substrate. The antenna utilizes a serpentine wire pattern to produce a thin layer of intense microwave electromagnetic field intensity that falls off exponentially in distance away from the substrate. The device, including RF electronics, was built on a standard 1'' by 3'' glass slide, and several antenna pixel sizes are tested for Biological Lab On a Chip Applications. This work is made possible by the NSEC NSF grant PHY-0117795.
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Authors
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David Issadore
Harvard University, Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences
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Tom Hunt
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Kristi Adamson
Harvard University, Physics
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R.M. Westervelt
Harvard University, Department of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Dept. of Physics, Harvard University
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Rick Rogers
Harvard Medical School