Poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) has a low glass transition temperature. Therefore it has significant applications in fields where low bonding temperature is needed. But PET microfluidic chip production using a hot embossing/bonding method has rarely been reported. In this study, hot embossing was conducted for a micro-feature's fabrication on a PET substrate, and a special temperature-pressure profile was used to achieve high replication accuracy without a vacuum; plasma surface treatment was used to improve the bonding capability of PET material, a cover plate was bonded with a substrate at a low temperature of around 63 • C, and VB2 was used as a separation solvent to test the capability of the PET microfluidic chip. The results show that high replication accuracy can be achieved using the new hot embossing process without a vacuum. Plasma surface treatment has increased the surface energy of the PET substrate and hot bonding can be achieved in low temperature. Plasma treatment has also changed the hydrophobic property of PET material; electrophoresis has been conducted successfully.
In this paper, a PMMA (polymethylmethacrylate) microfluidic device with filtration features fabricated by hot embossing and thermal bonding was used to separate RBCs (red blood cells) from whole rat blood. The filtration features are composed of 20 µm deep and 300 µm wide main channels, 15 µm high and 25 µm wide micro-dams which were fabricated in main channels and an array of orthogonal side channels for perfusion flow to collect RBCs. As rat blood advances through the main channels, a perfusion flow through the side channels washes away RBCs which are sufficiently small to enter the gaps between the micro-dams and the cover plate. A silicon mold fabricated by dry etching was used to produce three-dimensional filtration features on PMMA substrates. Oxygen plasma treatment was used to increase the adhesive ability of PMMA surfaces, which enables thermal bonding at 86 • C and 0.75 MPa. The distortion of microchannels and micro-dams has been minimized, which makes the value of the gap between the micro-dam and the cover plate appropriate for cell filtration.
This paper presents a NURBS (non-uniform rational B-splines) curves based stereo matching algorithm for which curves replace the edges extracted with a wavelet-based method. Curves in the left images are projected onto the right view and the stereo correspondence problem becomes simply the estimation of the similarity between these projections and the original curves in the right image. The projective invariance characteristic of NURBS curves is effective in reducing false matches due to distortion of the perspective projection and image noise. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method is robust and effective in removing abnormal reconstruction data. The obtained 3D reconstruction shape is closer to the real one.
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