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      A versatile maskless microscope projection photolithography system and its application in light-directed fabrication of DNA microarrays

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          Abstract

          We present a maskless microscope projection lithography system (MPLS), in which photomasks have been replaced by a Digital Micromirror Device type spatial light modulator (DMD, Texas Instruments). Employing video projector technology high resolution patterns, designed as bitmap images on the computer, are displayed using a micromirror array consisting of about 786000 tiny individually addressable tilting mirrors. The DMD, which is located in the image plane of an infinity corrected microscope, is projected onto a substrate placed in the focal plane of the microscope objective. With a 5x(0.25 NA) Fluar microscope objective, a fivefold reduction of the image to a total size of 9 mm2 and a minimum feature size of 3.5 microns is achieved. Our system can be used in the visible range as well as in the near UV (with a light intensity of up to 76 mW/cm2 around the 365 nm Hg-line). We developed an inexpensive and simple method to enable exact focusing and controlling of the image quality of the projected patterns. Our MPLS has originally been designed for the light-directed in situ synthesis of DNA microarrays. One requirement is a high UV intensity to keep the fabrication process reasonably short. Another demand is a sufficient contrast ratio over small distances (of about 5 microns). This is necessary to achieve a high density of features (i.e. separated sites on the substrate at which different DNA sequences are synthesized in parallel fashion) while at the same time the number of stray light induced DNA sequence errors is kept reasonably small. We demonstrate the performance of the apparatus in light-directed DNA chip synthesis and discuss its advantages and limitations.

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          Most cited references18

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          Soft lithography in biology and biochemistry.

          Soft lithography, a set of techniques for microfabrication, is based on printing and molding using elastomeric stamps with the patterns of interest in basrelief. As a technique for fabricating microstructures for biological applications, soft lithography overcomes many of the shortcomings of photolithography. In particular, soft lithography offers the ability to control the molecular structure of surfaces and to pattern the complex molecules relevant to biology, to fabricate channel structures appropriate for microfluidics, and to pattern and manipulate cells. For the relatively large feature sizes used in biology (> or = 50 microns), production of prototype patterns and structures is convenient, inexpensive, and rapid. Self-assembled monolayers of alkanethiolates on gold are particularly easy to pattern by soft lithography, and they provide exquisite control over surface biochemistry.
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            Light-directed, spatially addressable parallel chemical synthesis

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              Projection micro-stereolithography using digital micro-mirror dynamic mask

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                25 August 2006
                Article
                10.1063/1.2213152
                q-bio/0608038
                62750bd7-7e02-4cb5-86af-7414d5278427
                History
                Custom metadata
                Rev. Sci. Instrum. 77, 063711 (2006)
                12 pages, 9 figures, journal article
                q-bio.QM q-bio.BM

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