posted on 2014-05-20, 00:00authored byJu Hyeon Kim, Jae-Hoon Choi, Jae Young Sim, Woong
Chan Jeong, Seung-Man Yang, Shin-Hyun Kim
Monodisperse emulsion droplets with
a high volume fraction form
crystalline phases that can potentially serve as adjustable photomasks
in photolithography. Such photomasks were prepared using a microfluidic
device in which a flow-focusing junction, side channels, and a reservoir
were connected in series. Transparent oil droplets were generated
in a dye-containing continuous water phase at the flow-focusing junction.
The droplets were then concentrated through the selective removal
of the continuous phase using the side channels. This process led
to the formation of a regular array of droplets in the reservoir with
a configuration that depended on the relative height of the reservoir
to the droplet diameter. The configurations could be selected among
a single-layered hexagonal array, a bilayered square array, and a
bilayered hexagonal array. The droplet arrays were used as a photomask
to create hexagonal or square arrays of microdots. The transmittance
profile of the ultraviolet (UV) light from each droplet was parabolic,
which enabled the dot size to be tuned by controlling the UV irradiation
time. This mask effect is otherwise difficult to achieve using conventional
photomasks. The dot size and array periodicity could be adjusted by
the in-situ control of the droplet size at the flow-focusing droplet
maker. The combination of droplet size adjustments and the UV irradiation
time provided independent control over the dot size and array periodicity
to enable the preparation of a series of hexagonal microarrays with
a wide spectrum of array parameters using a single microfluidic device.