Chemical technology news from across RSC Publishing.
Low energy light source for on-chip construction
08 May 2008
For the first time, scientists have used ultra violet light emitting diodes (UV-LEDs) to make polymer columns in lab-on-a-chip devices. The columns could be used as micropumps to move solutions through the devices, claim Mirek Macka at Dublin City University, Ireland, and colleagues in Ireland and the Czech Republic.

The team used the light from UV-LEDs to start a polymerisation reaction between methacrylate units inside the channels of a microfluidic chip. They found that channels containing the resulting polymer columns were better at pumping ions than bare channels when they applied an electric field to the chip.
At present, commercially available UV-LEDs have poor electric energy-to-light conversion, which in turn can generate a lot of heat. 'Further development and improvement of the technical parameters is needed for UV-LEDs to become really attractive for mainstream chemistry,' says Macka. He plans to use UV-LEDs to photocatalyse other reactions to investigate their versatility, compared with classical UV sources.
Michael Brown
Link to journal article
UV-LED photopolymerised monoliths
Silvija Abele, Fu-Qiang Nie, Franti
ek Foret, Brett Paull and Mirek Macka, Analyst, 2008, 133, 864
DOI: 10.1039/b802693a
Also of interest
Molecular diodes hit new highs
UK researchers have made a molecular diode that they say could provide the answer to electronic device miniaturisation.
