Microfluidics Channels Milling into Silicon using Focused Ion Beam (FIB)
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Figure 1:Top Down view of identical channels milled in 2 different scales. A. A 850 µm long channel of 2 µm width milled using a 6.5 nA beam. B. A 80 µm long channel of 100 nm width patterned used a 150 pA beam. -
Figure 2:Isoview of the smaller channel. The linear length of this channel is 80 µm and the width of the channels is around 100 nm. -
Figure 3:Isoview of spiral type channel and a sinusoidale channel. Patterned with 150 pA.
Fluids constrained into micrometer scale structures behave differently than fluids flowing into macro-scale environment like water into a copper pipe. Microfluidics, with applications in transportation, energy and medical fields have will have considerable impact on society. For this reason, having a means to rapidly prototype designs is key to lower production cost and to substantially increase productivity in the R&D phase of development.
This application note will show the benefits of using focused ion beam (FIB) to produce microfluidic and nanofluidic channels with the Cross-Beam system equipped with a NanoPatterning and Visualization Engine (NPVE) system.
First, draw the channels prototype in a format that can be imported into the patterning engine. The NPVE offers great drawing capabilities, but it is also possible to use AutoCAD® or Adobe Illustrator® to draw the prototypes and then import them into the NPVE software as a DXF file. Once imported into the NPVE, select the patterning parameters such as beam current, patterning direction and dwell time.
Prototypes can be scaled and machined with extreme precision provided the FIB probe current is varied accordingly: channels of several microns in size can be milled using the biggest beam current and channels in the 100-nm range or smaller can be built using the smaller FIB probes. The time taken to mill the channels remains in the same range since the probe current is scaled proportionally to the amount of material removed.




