Accessing individual 75-micron diameter nozzles of a desktop inkjet printer to dispense picoliter droplets on demand

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

R. Waasdorp (Student TU Delft)

Oscar van den Heuvel (Student TU Delft)

Floyd Versluis (Student TU Delft)

Bram Hajee (Student TU Delft)

M.K. Ghatkesar (TU Delft - Micro and Nano Engineering)

Research Group
Micro and Nano Engineering
Copyright
© 2018 R. Waasdorp, Oscar van den Heuvel, Floyd Versluis, Bram Hajee, M.K. Ghatkesar
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1039/C8RA00756J
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 R. Waasdorp, Oscar van den Heuvel, Floyd Versluis, Bram Hajee, M.K. Ghatkesar
Research Group
Micro and Nano Engineering
Issue number
27
Volume number
8
Pages (from-to)
14765-14774
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Abstract

Desktop inkjet printers are ubiquitous and relatively inexpensive among the variety of available printers. These inkjet printers use an array of micro fluidic pumps, nozzles based on piezoelectric actuation, to dispense individual picoliter volume ink droplets at high speed. In this paper, we show that individual pumps in desktop printers can be accessed to dispense droplets on demand. Access was obtained using the printer’s command language programming. A detailed description of the access procedure is discussed. Droplets were printed on a paper as it rolled underneath the printhead, and with a minor hardware modification, they were also printed on a glass substrate. With this access, individual droplets were deposited, the smallest having an average diameter of 62 μm with a standard deviation of 6.9 μm, with a volume of ∼4 pL. From the intended position, the droplets had a standard deviation of 5.4 μm and 8.4 μm in the vertical and horizontal directions, respectively. The ink droplets were dispensed at a rate of 7.1 kHz. A circularity factor of 0.86 was obtained indicating that the dispensed droplets are of good quality. By replacing the ink in the cartridges with liquids of choice (e.g. cells, proteins, nanoparticles etc.), we believe it provides an opportunity for low-cost, high-speed, high-precision, picoliter volume printing for a variety of applications.