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1.IntroductionAs applications for microfluidic technologies grow, the commercialization and proliferation of miniaturized fluidic devices are currently limited by cost and the ability to scale to large volume production. In this letter, we report a microshunt applicable in glaucoma treatment for controlling and regulating intraocular pressure (IOP) of the human eye.1 The presented fabrication technique can be extended to many fluidic devices. Microfluidic device manufacturers employ many MEMS fabrication methods to build embedded channels, such as wafer bonding, electroplating with thick resist, and sacrificial layer etching and deposition sealing.2, 3, 4, 5, 6 Using electroplating with thick resist is a low-cost, low-temperature process relatively simple and suitable for high volume production.7 It also extends material selection to other biologically benign materials, such as gold, which are easily electroplated. In previous fabrication processes that have been reported using electroplating, enclosed microchannels are obtained by overgrowing the channel walls until closed.7 This is undesirable because it makes the devices thicker than intended, therefore, unsuitable for some applications. It is also impossible to pattern and build any subsequent layers on top of the microchannels. We present a new technique of sealing these channels and demonstrate the scalable and low-cost fabrication of an implantable microshunt. 2.Design ConsiderationsThe gold microshunt architecture used in this study is shown in Fig. 1 . This particular shunt is designed to meet overall size requirements, constrained by the available space in applicable organs (in-between the eye’s anterior chamber and the distal or suprachoroidal end) and surgical implantation incisions.1 These gold shunts consist of three layers. The bottom and top layers are thick [Fig. 1a] and form the base and sealing for the microchannels. Holes are designed on the both ends to facilitate the displaced organs in meshing around the device and maintaining it in place. The larger hole is added for handling purposes during surgery. The middle layer [Fig. 1b] is primarily made of channel walls wide, tall, and apart. Depending on the need of the patient, a number of ingress holes are opened allowing fluid from the anterior chamber of the eye to enter the device, directed through the microchannels, and exit in the suprachoroidal region of the eye. For flows at these scales ( and smaller), the Reynolds number (Re) is on the order of several hundred and the flow is assumed to be laminar. We use the pressure-drop equation 1 of flow (water) between parallel plates to obtain the geometrical design parameters: length ; width , and height . We also consider a steady, one-dimensional flow and negligible external forces. With all these simplifications, and a laminar flow friction factor ,8 the nondimensional pressure drop solution can be written as where is the density, the average velocity of the fluid, and is the hydraulic diameter .For effective flow in the normal eye maintains the IOP pressure at its physiological level of Hg. We select a width of to maximize the number of channels in the wide device, and a length of , with heights ranging from ( and Hg). 3.Experimental DetailsFigure 2 shows the microfabrication process of the device. The process uses two masks: the first mask is used for the base and cover layers of the shunt, and the second mask is used for molding the channel layer. The fabrication process begins with cleaning the wafer using a piranha-etch bath and oxygen reactive ion etching (RIE). The wafer is then spin-coated with a thin resist (Shipley, AZ 1813). A layer is then e-beam evaporated to form the adhesion (which will be removed once the device is completed) and seed layers, respectively. A portion of the gold seed layer also serves as a cathode for the electroplating process. The Cr and Au deposited onto the Si wafer are subsequently lifted off. The first layer [Fig. 2a] is then electroplated using a sodium sulfite–based gold electroplating solution, TechniGold 25E (Technic, Inc., Cranston, Rhode Island, USA) for the bath makeup. The electrochemical deposition was performed in a bath maintained at and constantly agitated to promote even plating. The deposition was typically done with a current of and deposition rate of were observed with the pH between 6.5 and 6.8. Following the electroplating of the bottom layer, a positive photoresist is spun (SPR 220-7) and used as the mold for electroplating [Fig. 2b]. The thickness is achieved in a single coating and repeated twice or three times to reached the desired 30 or channel height. The removal of the edge bead resulting from this thick photoresist is necessary in order to get good contact during exposure. After developing, each thick resist lithography step is followed by RIE oxygen plasma cleaning to remove photoresist traces from the exposed gold surfaces (with negligible etching of the resist mold). The fabrication of the resist mold is followed by the thick electroplated gold layer [Fig. 2c]. As the device gets thicker, the processing of the resist becomes more stringent. The absorption coefficient of SPR220-7 (Shipley) is high, and at the desired thickness range , either the bottom region is underexposed or the top region is overexposed. For this layer, the double- or triple-coat process is optimized to achieve straight and near-vertical sidewall profiles. After each coat, soft baking is carried out at a lower temperature and longer period than the preceding coat. This ensures that the all coats harden and the solvent evaporates in all layers of resist. Following this lithography step, the channel structures are electroplated using the aforementioned plating process. In many microchannel electroplating processes, the final enclosure of the channels is achieved by overgrowing or “mushrooming” the gold on top of the resist until channel walls meet9 or by fabricating the top and bottom pieces separately and spot welding them together. The mushrooming technique is simple and fast, but it results in plating an extra thick top layer of at least half the channel thickness. In addition, this technique limits the achievable design geometries preventing optimal performance of the device. In contrast, the bonding technique allows for control over device height and arbitrary device geometry. However, it is a very slow and expensive process to isolate, align, and weld each individual device, and can result in air bubbles often remaining trapped between layers, creating nonbonded spots, which create leakages in the final device. In order to avoid these limitations, we developed a process to seal the channels using a thin gold seed layer deposited via evaporation prior to electroplating of the third structural layers [Fig. 2d]. This provides a more evenly distributed current path in the electroplating bath, yielding more control of the final thickness of the cover layer compared to overgrowing the channels until they seal, and eliminates the “mushroom” topography usually associated with using such techniques. After the third layer (cover) fabrication, all the photoresist in the device is eliminated in an ultrasonic acetone bath with mild agitation for , and the device is released from the handle wafer with a chrome etchant [Fig. 2e]. No visible photoresist residue or chrome was observed in the final device, although further inspection of the gold material (elemental analysis) is necessary. To investigate the fabricated microchannels, the silicon wafer was diced across the channels. Figure 3 shows an image of the fabricated microchannel cross section with gold sealing. The aspect ratio depends solely on the thickness of the sacrificial material. As explained before, deeper channels will have more stringent process parameters, but the fabrication steps will remain the same. The release time of the device simply depends on the thickness of the chromium adhesion layer as well as the width of the device. However, this release process is several days long. Prior to the release, the mild ultrasonic agitation used to etch away the photoresist lasts . 4.ConclusionWe have successfully demonstrated a cost-effective, biocompatible, microchannel fabrication technique capable of producing a variety of metal devices. The width, depth, and length can be precisely controlled by the combination of oxygen plasma ashing, standard photolithography, and electroplating. The fabrication method described here is scalable (i.e., several more layers could be added to the device). 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