Dear Nathan, thank you for your suggestion. i will try to use the cyanoacrylate to bond PDMS and Polycarbonate,. Allwyn. On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 3:09 AM, Nathan McCorklewrote: > You should be able to bond with cyanoacrylate or applying oxygen plasma to > each layer, then pressing the two together to bond. > > On Thu, Dec 10, 2009 at 10:44 AM, Nano World >wrote: > > > Dear all, > > > > I have a thin layer of PDMS (30µm thick) sandwiched between foils of > > polycarbonate. The lower polycarbonate layer has channels of ~25µm depth > > and 150µm width. There are interconnects that supplies the fluid to the > > channel (water) > > > > I have to prevent the leakage of water. Hence I am clamping the whole > > system > > between two thick blocks (by means of screws). When I apply a > hydrostatic > > pressure I could see the water flow in the micro channels and also in the > > interconnects. > > > > The main problems are: > > > > (i) If I apply less pressure on the clamping, the water leaks between the > > interfaces. > > > > (ii) If I apply more pressure then there is no flow of water in the > > microchannels. I suspect this is due to the fact that the PDMS membrane > > stretches and also some form of bending occurs (PDMS might bends and > block > > the channel) that block the flow of water. > > > > (iii) The clamping pressure is not uniform and since it is applied > manually > > this could also have some implications. > > > > My questions are: > > > > 1. Is there is any way that I can make the clamping leak proof and in the > > same time have a nice flow (less than 1痞/min). > > > > 2. Lot of bonding methods have been presented in the literature. Has > anyone > > successfully verified bonding of PDMS/ polycarbonate in their own > > laboratory > > settings. > > > > 3. Should a thicker PDMS membrane or a fluid such as isoproponal which > has > > smaller contact angle with water will solve the problem. > > > > Thank you in advance > > Allwyn.