To perform PDMS soft lithography, you need to use a mold. The most commun and used molds are certainly the epoxy resin SU-8 molds. Every year many laboratories begin a microfluidic activity and sometimes not with the good equipment or methodology. This review aims to bring you the basic knowledge on how to make a mold in epoxy resin SU-8.
In this review we use a spin coater to dispense the resin, but other techniques can be used. We are going to give you here some tips and tricks to make the SU-8 mold fabrication as easy as pushing a button. Do not hesitate if you have specific questions, we always like to help fellow researchers, and we will try to answer as best as possible, if you are interested in making your own SU8 mold please look at our SU-8 station.
(In this review we are going to work with a silicon wafer, you can use other substrates such as glass with some little modifications of the process. If you have any question about other substrates contact us.)
Even if the wafer is new, it has to be prepared before receiving the SU-8 photoresist. If you are in a clean room, you can clean it with piranha solution (H2SO4+H2O2), outside a clean room you can use acetone. The cleaning can be optional if you are sure of the state of your wafer but it is strongly advised. In any case you have to heat your wafer to remove all moisture on the surface. We recommend a heating time of 15 min at 120°C in an oven for example. This heating step is really relevant because it will allow the SU-8 to stick better on the substrate.
If you have some difficulties to spread the photoresist over the surface or if during the soft bake the photoresist makes holes in the layer, it means that the photoresist doesn’t wet the substrate enough. A plasma treatment (O2 or Air plasma works fine) during 5 minutes will increase the spreading. At last, even if, with the dehydration step, the photoresist doesn’t stick to the substrate, you can use an adhesion promoter which can be deposited by gas such as HMDS or in liquid form and spin coated first on the surface like the Omnicoat.
To create the photoresist layer which is later going to be the mold, we use a spin coater. The spin coating is probably the most used technique to create a photoresist layer of a wanted thickness. We describe in more details the spin coating step in our review “how to get the best SU-8 spin coating”. The spin coating consists in putting a puddle of SU-8 photoresist on a rotated substrate. The rotation speed, the acceleration and the SU-8 photoresist viscosity will define the thickness of the SU-8 photoresist layer. To succeed this step some precautions have to be taken:
A turnkey offer to fabricate your su-8 mold and pdms chips
The aim of the soft bake is to evaporate the solvent to make the SU-8 photoresist more solid. The evaporation will slightly change the thickness of the layer and prepare the SU-8 photoresist to be exposed to the UV. Indeed a quantity around 7% of solvent alows for good exposure. We have gathered more information about the relevant parameters to do a good SU-8 photoresist bake in our review “how to get the best SU-8 baking”. It will depend on the thickness of the layer but keep in mind that the most problematic point will be the mechanical stress inside your SU-8 photoresist. To decrease this stress as much as possible, you have to heat and cool down slightly. Use a hot plate to bake your SU-8 photoresist, it will allow you to have heat from the bottom to the top of your wafer and thus favor solvent evaporation. You can see which hot plate we recommend here. For heating progressively we advise you to follow a special heat pattern, with a first plateau at 65°C then a second at 95°C, the time of each plateau depending on the thickness of the SU-8 photoresist layer. At the end of this step, the wafer can be kept in dark and on a flat surface during several weeks before continuing and finishing the process without serious consequences.
The edge bead removal step consists in removing the photoresist edge bead around the wafer after the spin coating. The edge bead appears because of the surface tension of the photoresist. Because of it, the photoresist layer is thicker at the edge and the height namely depends on the photoresist viscosity. Especially for very viscous photoresists, where the edge bead can rise several µm, it has to be removed. Indeed, the edge bead prevents the mask to be as close as possible of the wafer during the exposure step and this gap will lead to a resolution loss in the design. Usually the edge bead removal is done by injecting acetone forward the edge of the substrate when it is rotated at high speed. This step can be achieved by hand or automatically thanks to bigger equipment.
The aim of the exposure is to initiate the cross linkage by the activation of the PAC (PhotoActiv Component) in some parts of the photoresist. This activation will change the local properties of the resin which, after baking, will be soluble or not into a solvent. Since the SU-8 is a negative photoresist, it means that the part exposed to the UV light will become hard and the other part will dissolve during the development. Some parameters have to been chosen carefully:
The second photoresist bake is called PEB (Post Exposure Bake). It’s done as its name said, just after the UV exposure. The UV exposure activates the photoactive components in the SU-8 photoresist, but it needs energy to continue the reaction; this bake brings that energy. As for the soft bake, the most problematic point will be the mechanical stress inside your SU-8 photoresist and thus the heating and cooling down will have to be done slightly to decrease as much as possible this stress. The heating pattern is the same as in the soft bake, a first plateau at 65°C then a second at 95°C, the time of each plateau depends on the thickness of the SU-8 photoresist layer. Make sure your wafer is at the room temperature before continuing the process.
The development is the step where the non linked SU-8 photoresist is diluted in solvent. At this step the design is revealed on the substrate. The SU-8 can be developed thanks to the SU-8 developer. It’s a product from Microchem mainly composed of PGMEA (Propylene glycol monomethyl ether acetate) but you can also develop the SU-8 thanks to Ethyl-lactate or Di-acetone alcohol.
The third and last photoresist bake is called “Hard bake”, it is the last step of the process but can be optional. A lot of strength remain inside the SU-8 photoresist at the end of the process that can create cracks on the surface or even delamination of the layer… The hard bake heats the SU-8 photoresist at high temperature (more than 120°C) to suppress these strengths. Thanks to it, some cracks disappear and the SU-8 photoresist becomes harder. Once again, it’s the same as in the soft bake and PEB, the increase and cooling down of the photoresist have to be done slightly.
At this step the SU-8 mold is already finished, but we have to check if it fits our expectations. For that you have to watch it under a microscope for a first visual checking. Then you can use optical or a mechanical profiler to measure the depth of the layer.
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Do you want tips on how to best set up your microfluidic experiment? Do you need inspiration or a different angle to take on your specific problem? Well, we probably have an application note just for you, feel free to check them out!
Microfabrication techniques for a circular channel
In soft lithography, the fabrication of a mold, often made in SU-8, is required for replicating PDMS microfluidic structures.
Replicating PDMS-based structures first requires the fabrication of a SU-8 master mold that will serve as a patterned template for PDMS casting
How do you perform a successful SU-8 exposure? Here you will find the tips and tricks to do it.
How do you perform a successful photoresist baking? Here you will find the tips and tricks to do it.
How do you perform a successful spin coating? Here you will find the tips and tricks to do it.
The final PDMS layer thickness mainly depends of spin-coating speed and duration.
Here you can find a complete overview of a PDMS chip replication.
Unlike photolithography, soft lithography can process a wide range of elastomeric materials, i.e. mechanically soft materials.
A UV Lamp to expose your SU-8 photoresist. You will find here the relevant points to think about.
A plasma cleaner to bond your PDMS chip, you will find here the relevant points to think about.
A spin coater creates a thin layer of photoresist or PDMS, you will find here the relevant information about how to choose one.
You have the choice between glass or plastic photolithography mask, but how do you choose? here is some information to help you with the decision
A hot plate to bake your SU-8 photoresist, you will find here the relevant points to think about.
Every following technology is based on the same system of additive process, every object is built layer by layer after being sliced by an informatic system.
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