Researchers have 3D-printed an all-liquid device that, with the click of a button, can be repeatedly reconfigured on demand to serve a wide range of applications from making battery materials to screening drug candidates.
To make the 3D-printable fluidic device, a specially patterned glass substrate was designed. When two liquids — one containing nanoscale clay particles and another containing polymer particles — are printed onto the substrate, they come together at the interface of the two liquids and within milliseconds, form a very thin channel or tube about 1 millimeter in diameter. Once the channels are formed, catalysts can be placed in different channels of the device. The user can then 3D-print bridges between channels, connecting them so that a chemical flowing through them encounters catalysts in a specific order, setting off a cascade of chemical reactions to make specific chemical compounds. When controlled by a computer, this complex process can be automated to execute tasks associated with catalyst placement, build liquid bridges within the device, and run reaction sequences needed to make molecules.
The multitasking device can also be programmed to function like an artificial circulatory system that separates molecules flowing through the channel and automatically removes unwanted byproducts while it continues to print a sequence of bridges to specific catalysts and carry out the steps of chemical synthesis. The researchers plan to electrify the walls of the device using conductive nanoparticles to expand the types of reactions that can be explored, possibly creating all-liquid circuitry, fuel cells, and batteries.
For more information, contact Lawrence Berkeley Lab’s Intellectual Property Office at