Capillary Toys (Educational / Experimental)

Macro versions of "microfluidic" devices, intended to demonstrate capillary flows to students. Print in PLA.
1h 11m
3× print file
0.18 mm
0.15 mm
0.40 mm
14.00 g
25
83
0
1121
updated December 13, 2023

Description

PDF

Just add water. 

 

Notes: 

  • 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
  • There is a video for this one: 

 

References/inspiration: 

doi:10.1039/c8lc00458g

doi:10.15760/etd.2914 (ch. 4)

youtube / watch?v=pct3JhVFSLo

and thing:4116612

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Model origin

The author marked this model as their own original creation.

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