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Dive into the research topics where Laurent Tanguy is active.

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Featured researches published by Laurent Tanguy.


Langmuir | 2012

Completely Superhydrophobic PDMS Surfaces for Microfluidics

Artur Tropmann; Laurent Tanguy; Peter Koltay; Roland Zengerle; Lutz Riegger

This study presents a straightforward two-step fabrication process of durable, completely superhydrophobic microchannels in PDMS. First, a composite material of PDMS/PTFE particles is prepared and used to replicate a master microstructure. Superhydrophobic surfaces are formed by subsequent plasma treatment, in which the PDMS is isotropically etched and PTFE particles are excavated. We compare the advancing and receding contact angles of intrinsic PDMS samples and composite PTFE/PDMS samples (1 wt %, 8 wt %, and 15 wt % PTFE particle concentration) and demonstrate that both the horizontal and vertical surfaces are indeed superhydrophobic. The best superhydrophobicity is observed for samples with a PTFE particle concentration of 15 wt %, which have advancing and receding contact angles of 159° ± 4° and 158° ± 3°, respectively.


Micromachines | 2013

A Low-Cost, Normally Closed, Solenoid Valve for Non-Contact Dispensing in the Sub-µL Range

Stefan Bammesberger; Sabrina Kartmann; Laurent Tanguy; Dong Liang; Klaus Mutschler; Andreas Ernst; Roland Zengerle; Peter Koltay

We present a disposable, normally closed, non-contact dispensing valve for the sub-µL range. The miniaturized solenoid valve (diameter: 8 mm, height: 27.25 mm) is compatible to standard Luer-Lock interfaces. A highly dynamic actuation principle enables opening times down to 1 ms. The dispensing performance was evaluated for water (η = 1.03 mPas) and a 66% (w/w) glycerol/water solution (η = 16.98 mPas), at pressures varying from 200 to 800 mbar. The experimentally determined minimal dispensing volume was 163 nL (CV 1.6%) for water and 123 nL (CV 4.5%) for 66% (w/w) glycerol/water. The low-cost polymer valve enables high precision dispensing of liquid volumes down to the lower end of the sub-µL range comparable to high-end non-disposable micro-dispensing valves.


Electrophoresis | 2017

Open microfluidic gel electrophoresis: Rapid and low cost separation and analysis of DNA at the nanoliter scale

Ludwig Gutzweiler; Tobias Gleichmann; Laurent Tanguy; Peter Koltay; Roland Zengerle; Lutz Riegger

Gel electrophoresis is one of the most applied and standardized tools for separation and analysis of macromolecules and their fragments in academic research and in industry. In this work we present a novel approach for conducting on‐demand electrophoretic separations of DNA molecules in open microfluidic (OM) systems on planar polymer substrates. The approach combines advantages of slab gel, capillary‐ and chip‐based methods offering low consumable costs (<0.1


Journal of Micromechanics and Microengineering | 2016

Semi-contact-writing of polymer molds for prototyping PDMS chips with low surface roughness, sharp edges and locally varying channel heights

Ludwig Gutzweiler; Fabian Stumpf; Laurent Tanguy; Guenter Roth; Peter Koltay; Roland Zengerle; Lutz Riegger

) circumventing cost‐intensive microfluidic chip fabrication, short process times (5 min per analysis) and high sensitivity (4 ng/μL dsDNA) combined with reasonable resolution (17 bases). The open microfluidic separation system comprises two opposing reservoirs of 2–4 μL in volume, a semi‐contact written gel line acting as separation channel interconnecting the reservoirs and sample injected into the line via non‐contact droplet dispensing and thus enabling the precise control of the injection plug and sample concentration. Evaporation is prevented by covering aqueous structures with PCR‐grade mineral oil while maintaining surface temperature at 15°C. The liquid gel line exhibits a semi‐circular cross section of adaptable width (∼200–600 μm) and height (∼30–80 μm) as well as a typical length of 15–55 mm. Layout of such liquid structures is adaptable on‐demand not requiring time consuming and repetitive fabrication steps. The approach was successfully demonstrated by the separation of a standard label‐free DNA ladder (100–1000 bp) at 100 V/cm via in‐line staining and laser induced fluorescent end‐point detection using an automated prototype.


Sensors | 2012

Numerical investigations on electric field characteristics with respect to capacitive detection of free-flying droplets.

Andreas Ernst; Klaus Mutschler; Laurent Tanguy; Nils Paust; Roland Zengerle; Peter Koltay

Microfluidic systems fabricated in polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) enable a broad variety of applications and are widespread in the field of Lab-on-a-Chip. Here we demonstrate semi-contact-writing, a novel method for fabrication of polymer based molds for casting microfluidic PDMS chips in a highly flexible, time and cost-efficient manner. The method is related to direct-writing of an aqueous polymer solution on a planar glass substrate and substitutes conventional, time- and cost-consuming UV-lithography. This technique facilitates on-demand prototyping in a low-cost manner and is therefore ideally suited for rapid chip layout iterations. No cleanroom facilities and less expertise are required. Fabrication time from scratch to ready-to-use PDMS-chip is less than 5?h. This polymer writing method enables structure widths down to 140 ?m and controllable structure heights ranging from 5.5 ?m for writing single layers up to 98 ?m by stacking. As a unique property, freely selectable height variations across a substrate can be achieved by application of local stacking. Furthermore, the molds exhibit low surface roughness (R a ??=??24?nm, R RMS??=??28?nm) and high fidelity edge sharpness. We validated the method by fabrication of molds to cast PDMS chips for droplet based flow-through PCR with single-cell sensitivity.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2013

Novel gravimetric measurement technique for quantitative volume calibration in the sub-microliter range

Dong Liang; Chris Steinert; Stefan Bammesberger; Laurent Tanguy; Andreas Ernst; Roland Zengerle; Peter Koltay

In this paper a multi-disciplinary simulation of a capacitive droplet sensor based on an open plate capacitor as transducing element is presented. The numerical simulations are based on the finite volume method (FVM), including calculations of an electric field which changes according to the presence of a liquid droplet. The volume of fluid (VOF) method is applied for the simulation of the ejection process of a liquid droplet out of a dispenser nozzle. The simulations were realised using the computational fluid dynamic (CFD) software CFD ACE+. The investigated capacitive sensing principle enables to determine the volume of a micro droplet passing the sensor capacitor due to the induced change in capacity. It could be found that single droplets in the considered volume range of 5 nL < Vdrop < 100 nL lead to a linear change of the capacity up to ΔQ < 30 fC. The sensitivity of the focused capacitor geometry was evaluated to be Si = 0.3 fC/nL. The simulation results are validated by experiments which exhibit good agreement.


Mechatronics | 2014

Multi physics network simulation of a solenoid dispensing valve

Klaus Mutschler; Shivam Dwivedi; Sabrina Kartmann; Stefan Bammesberger; Peter Koltay; Roland Zengerle; Laurent Tanguy


Drug Discovery Today | 2013

Quantitative characterization of non-contact microdispensing technologies for the sub-microliter range.

Stefan Bammesberger; Andreas Ernst; Nadine Losleben; Laurent Tanguy; Roland Zengerle; Peter Koltay


Procedia Engineering | 2012

Nanoliter droplet characterization using vibrating crystal sensor with surface-attached polymer hydrogel coating

D. Liang; J. Zhang; Laurent Tanguy; Andreas Ernst; Peter Koltay; Roland Zengerle


Archive | 2013

DEVICE AND METHOD FOR DISPENSING OR RECEIVING A LIQUID VOLUME

Peter Koltay; Andreas Ernst; Chris Steinert; Laurent Tanguy

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Dong Liang

University of Freiburg

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