A process of fabricating a seven layer microfluidic chip using CO2 laser processing and hot bonding technology is presented. The applied polymer substrates were poly(methyl-methacrylate) (PMMA), polycarbonate (PC), polystyrene (PS) and polyethylene terephthalate (PET). The results show the optimal combination of polymer substrates for the seven layer microfluidic chip at the hot bonding parameters of bonding temperature of 100 degrees C and bonding pressure of 1 MPa for maintaining times of nine minutes. Due to the different properties of the polymer substrates, the profile of the microchannel in the different polymer sheets for the same CO2 laser processing parameters. The maximum tensile strength of the microfluidic was measured as 1.0 MPa. The combined polymers with the minimum binding force were PC and PMMA. At the end, a mixing experiment was performed in the seven layer microfluidic chip with different fluid Re numbers.
Two-dimensional (2D) metallic transition metal dichalcogenides (MTMDCs), the complement of 2D semiconducting TMDCs, have attracted extensive attentions in recent years because of their versatile properties such as superconductivity, charge density wave, and magnetism. To promote the investigations of their fantastic properties and broad applications, the preparation of large-area, high-quality, and thickness-tunable 2D MTMDCs has become a very urgent topic and great efforts have been made. This topical review therefore focuses on the introduction of the recent achievements for the controllable syntheses of 2D MTMDCs (VS2, VSe2, TaS2, TaSe2, NbS2, NbSe2, etc). To begin with, some earlier developed routes such as chemical vapor transport, mechanical/chemical exfoliation, as well as molecular beam epitaxy methods are briefly introduced. Secondly, the scalable chemical vapor deposition methods involved with two sorts of metal-based feedstocks, including transition metal chlorides and transition metal oxidations mixed with alkali halides, are discussed separately. Finally, challenges for the syntheses of high-quality 2D MTMDCs are discussed and the future research directions in the related fields are proposed.