May 24, 2013
Journal Article

Optofluidic-Tunable Color Filters And Spectroscopy Based On Liquid-Crystal Microflows

Abstract

The integration of color filters with microfluidics has attracted substantial attention in recent years, for on-chip absorption, fluorescence, or Raman analysis. We describe such tunable filters based on the micro-flow of liquid crystals. The filter operation is based on the wavelength dependent liquid crystal birefringence that can be tuned by modifying the flow velocity field in the microchannel. The latter is possible both temporally and spatially by varying the inlet pressure and the channel geometry respectively. We explored the use of these optofluidic filters for on-chip absorption spectroscopy; by integrating the distance dependent color filter with a dye-filled micro-channel, the absorption spectrum of a dye could be measured. Liquid crystal microflows simplify substantially the optofluidic integration, actuation and tuning of color filters for lab-on-a-chip spectroscopic applications.

Revised: August 12, 2014 | Published: May 24, 2013

Citation

Cuennet J.G., A.E. Vasdekis, and D. Psaltis. 2013. Optofluidic-Tunable Color Filters And Spectroscopy Based On Liquid-Crystal Microflows. Lab on a Chip 13, no. 14:2721-2726. PNNL-SA-93572. doi:10.1039/C3LC50501D