Microstructuring of materials with laser technologies for biomedical applications

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Identifiers

Publication date

Tutors

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Metrics
Google Scholar
lacobus
Export

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Abstract

This thesis presents the use of laser technologies for structuring different materials for applications in biomedicine. One of the aims of this work is the fabrication of fluidic chips for their employment as preclinical devices. By direct or indirect laser techniques, materials like soda-lime glass, titanium or tantalum are structured. Dimensions from microns to millimetres are achieved, depending on the final application of the chip. In particular, a device that imitates a coronary bifurcation is fabricated by laser technologies and soft-lithography methods. It is validated by culturing endothelial cells in their inner walls that withstand flow conditions. Other structures, like microchannels, a circulating tumour cells capturing chip or patterns over titanium and tantalum are manufactured.

Description

Bibliographic citation

Relation

Has part

Has version

Is based on

Is part of

Is referenced by

Is version of

Requires

Sponsors

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional