Print in PLA – although the ideal material would be Nylon
The top reservoir is for reagent, and should stop flowing when it reaches the main branch, unless there is liquid in the main branch
Use a paper towel as a capillary pump to “pull” the sample and reagent
For demos, just use water; perhaps add some food coloring to one or the other (or both)
This would work better if it were smaller; however, it is hard to create macro-scale capillary demonstrations (that is the intent here)
Mk1:
Infill modifier is used to create the capillary pump structure (see image #2)
Note that pressing a paper towel over this is still best for good pumping
I do feel there is room to make effective capillary pumps using infill structures, but for most demonstration / educational purposes, having some kind of capillary network that ends in a paper towel will provide 100x more pumping action. For an actual laboratory application where a filament-based solution is desired, an all-printed solution may be viable for early testing, prototyping, or first-run experiments while the “real” microfluidics are being fabricated. If you don't like the idea of this now, come back in a few years after you have a resin sensitivity.
Mk2:
Open-channel design
Still works best with a paper towel as a capillary pump
Mk3:
Open-channel with an “on” switch for the sample reservoir
Wet the printed slug used as the on switch and place in the hole
Can be best to drag a bead of water from the sample reservoir
This setup lets you prepare the demo ahead of time