# Laser Ablation and Injection Moulding as Techniques for Producing Micro   Channels Compatible with Small Angle X-Ray Scattering

**Authors:** Richard Haider, Benedetta Marmiroli, Iakovos Gavalas, Marcell Wolf,, Marco Matteucci, Rafael Taboryski, Anja Boisen, Emmanuel Stratakis, Heinz, Amenitsch

arXiv: 1812.04568 · 2018-12-12

## TL;DR

This paper compares laser ablation and injection moulding techniques for fabricating microchannels suitable for integration with Small Angle X-Ray Scattering, emphasizing low background scattering and device versatility.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that injection moulding of Topas is a more suitable method than laser ablation of polycarbonate for producing microchannels compatible with SAXS.

## Key findings

- Injection moulding of Topas yields lower background scattering.
- Laser ablation can produce suitable microchannels with careful alignment.
- Injection moulding offers greater versatility in device design.

## Abstract

Microfluidic mixing is an important means for in-situ sample preparation and handling while Small Angle X-Ray Scattering (SAXS) is a proven tool for characterising (macro-)molecular structures. In combination those two techniques enable investigations of fast reactions with high time resolution (<1 ms). The goal of combining a micro mixer with SAXS, however, puts constraints on the materials and production methods used in the device fabrication. The measurement channel of the mixer needs good x-ray transparency and a low scattering background. While both depend on the material used, the requirement for low scattering especially limits the techniques suitable for producing the mixer, as the fabrication process can induce molecular orientations and stresses that can adversely influence the scattering signal. Not only is it important to find a production method that results in a device with low background scattering, but it also has to be versatile enough to produce appropriate mixer designs. Here we discuss two methods - laser ablation of polycarbonate and injection moulding of Topas - which were found suitable for our needs, provided care is taken in aligning the mixing/reaction channel, where the actual measurements will be carried out. We find injection moulding to be the better of the two methods.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1812.04568