Micromanufacturing in fused silica via femtosecond laser irradiation followed by gas-phase chemical etching
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2012
abstract:
Femtosecond laser irradiation followed by chemical etching (FLICE) with
hydrogen fluoride (HF) is an emerging technique for the fabrication of directly buried,
three-dimensional microfluidic channels in silica. The procedure, as described in literature,
consists of irradiating a silica slab followed by chemical etching using hydrogen fluoride.
With aqueous HF the etching process is diffusion-limited and is self-terminating, leading to
maximum microchannel lengths of about 1.5 mm, while the use of low-pressure gaseous
HF etchant can quickly produce 3 mm long channels with an aspect ratio
(Length/Diameter) higher than 25. By utilizing this methodology the aspect ratio is not
constant, but depends on the length of the channel. When the microchannel is short the
aspect ratio increases quickly until it reaches a maximum length at around 1400 ?m.
Thereafter the aspect ratio starts to decrease slowly. In this paper we present a variation of
the low-pressure gaseous HF etching method, which is based on the dynamic displacement
of the etchant. This method results in a 13% increase in the aspect ratio (L/D = 29) at the
expense of a low etching speed (4 ?m/min).
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
laser micromachining; FLICE; silicon dioxide; selective etching; anhydrous hydrogen fluoride
List of contributors:
Cerullo, GIULIO NICOLA; Osellame, Roberto; MARTINEZ VAZQUEZ, Rebeca
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