OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis

With the continued establishment of hacker-spaces and fab-labs hosted in academic libraries, there is an increase in the availability of resources for designing scientific instrumentation in the undergraduate curriculum. Many available designs, however, may be too complex to fabricate in teaching en...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R.J. LeSuer, K.L. Osgood, K.E. Stelnicki, J.L. Mendez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2018-10-01
Series:HardwareX
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246806721830052X
_version_ 1818425810303844352
author R.J. LeSuer
K.L. Osgood
K.E. Stelnicki
J.L. Mendez
author_facet R.J. LeSuer
K.L. Osgood
K.E. Stelnicki
J.L. Mendez
author_sort R.J. LeSuer
collection DOAJ
description With the continued establishment of hacker-spaces and fab-labs hosted in academic libraries, there is an increase in the availability of resources for designing scientific instrumentation in the undergraduate curriculum. Many available designs, however, may be too complex to fabricate in teaching environments. Presented here is OMIS, the Open Millifluidic Inquiry System, which is a platform for performing small-scale chemical synthesis and analysis. OMIS consists of a 3D printed syringe pump, control hardware based upon the Arduino microcontroller and 3D printed reaction vessels. The OMIS syringe pump utilizes a low-power stepper motor which simplifies the instrument construction and allows for power to be supplied from batteries or the USB port of a computer. The simple design of OMIS allows for the instrument to be fabricated in one day, including the time to 3D print components. The OMIS syringe pump is able to deliver fluids at rates between 60 and 300 μL/min, depending on syringe size, with a reproducibility of 3%. Several applications of OMIS are presented, including a demonstration of laminar flow in a 3D printed millifluidic chip, implementation of a low-volume flow-cell cuvette insert and the synthesis of magnetite nanoparticles. Keywords: 3D printed syringe pump, Arduino microcontroller, Lab on a chip
first_indexed 2024-12-14T14:19:51Z
format Article
id doaj.art-973f1c0735c2425c9e1bdcafa7164e15
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2468-0672
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T14:19:51Z
publishDate 2018-10-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series HardwareX
spelling doaj.art-973f1c0735c2425c9e1bdcafa7164e152022-12-21T22:58:06ZengElsevierHardwareX2468-06722018-10-014OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysisR.J. LeSuer0K.L. Osgood1K.E. Stelnicki2J.L. Mendez3The College at Brockport, SUNY, Brockport, NY 14420, United States; Corresponding author.The College at Brockport, SUNY, Brockport, NY 14420, United StatesChicago State University, Chicago, IL 60628, United StatesChicago State University, Chicago, IL 60628, United StatesWith the continued establishment of hacker-spaces and fab-labs hosted in academic libraries, there is an increase in the availability of resources for designing scientific instrumentation in the undergraduate curriculum. Many available designs, however, may be too complex to fabricate in teaching environments. Presented here is OMIS, the Open Millifluidic Inquiry System, which is a platform for performing small-scale chemical synthesis and analysis. OMIS consists of a 3D printed syringe pump, control hardware based upon the Arduino microcontroller and 3D printed reaction vessels. The OMIS syringe pump utilizes a low-power stepper motor which simplifies the instrument construction and allows for power to be supplied from batteries or the USB port of a computer. The simple design of OMIS allows for the instrument to be fabricated in one day, including the time to 3D print components. The OMIS syringe pump is able to deliver fluids at rates between 60 and 300 μL/min, depending on syringe size, with a reproducibility of 3%. Several applications of OMIS are presented, including a demonstration of laminar flow in a 3D printed millifluidic chip, implementation of a low-volume flow-cell cuvette insert and the synthesis of magnetite nanoparticles. Keywords: 3D printed syringe pump, Arduino microcontroller, Lab on a chiphttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246806721830052X
spellingShingle R.J. LeSuer
K.L. Osgood
K.E. Stelnicki
J.L. Mendez
OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
HardwareX
title OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
title_full OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
title_fullStr OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
title_full_unstemmed OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
title_short OMIS: The Open Millifluidic Inquiry System for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
title_sort omis the open millifluidic inquiry system for small scale chemical synthesis and analysis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S246806721830052X
work_keys_str_mv AT rjlesuer omistheopenmillifluidicinquirysystemforsmallscalechemicalsynthesisandanalysis
AT klosgood omistheopenmillifluidicinquirysystemforsmallscalechemicalsynthesisandanalysis
AT kestelnicki omistheopenmillifluidicinquirysystemforsmallscalechemicalsynthesisandanalysis
AT jlmendez omistheopenmillifluidicinquirysystemforsmallscalechemicalsynthesisandanalysis