Am Mon, 17 May 2004 14:30:35 -0400 (EDT) schriebst du: Hi, I also do a in principle similar work. I would suggest: After 1h @ 60C remove the (half cured) PDMS vom the master. Do the aligning oft PDMS to the glas. Give the device to oven @ 80C over night. This cause complete curing and bounding. This works, because after 1h pre-curing there are a lot of non-saturated bounding capacities on the PDMS Surface. The bounding is not as strong as with plasma, but more reproduceable (what is often a problem using cheap plasma sources). That's how I do my staff and it works fine. Sorry for my poor english. Please feel free to contact me if you have further questions. hth & ng - ThF > Hi, > I need to bond PDMS to glass, and i have been having problems with this. I have > features on the cured PDMS that have to be aligned under the microscope to > patterned electrodes (Au/Cr) on a glass slide. > > Since i need to align the pattern on the cured PDMS to the electrodes, i have a > delay of about 2-5 minutes after i have treated both the surfaces with an O2 > plasma. > > I have had better luck when i bond the PDMS with the glass slide immediately > after plasma treatment of the two surfaces without allignment. > > Can anyone suggest a procedure that i can use to obtain fairly good bonding even > with the 2-5 min delay after treating the surfaces with an O2 plasma. > > PDMS curing recipie - > 10:1 (sylgard 184 elastomer base: sylgard 184 curing agent) > cure the PDMS for 1 hr at 60oC in an oven. > > Thanks, > > Varun Reddy