micro chemical chip made with mass production technology jointly developed by Panasonic and Micro Chemical Giken.

micro chemical chip made with mass production technology jointly developed by Panasonic and Micro Chemical Giken.

Panasonic and Micro Chemical Giken (Saiwai-ku, Kawasaki City), a venture company from the University of Tokyo, announced on April 6 that they have developed a technology to mass produce micro chemical chips, which can be used to create a single chip for analytical equipment used in blood tests, pharmaceuticals, and environmental research. The glass molding method used for the production of aspheric lenses for cameras, etc., which was owned by Panasonic, was converted to the new method. With the newly developed technology, it is possible to produce chips with a diameter of up to 50 mm and mass produce tens of thousands of chips per month. The low cost also has the advantage that the chips can be disposable on site. Currently, the mainstream chip material is resin, which is easy to mass-produce and low-cost. However, resin is difficult to resist chemicals and the environment, and this has been an issue for its further spread. Photo taken on November 6, 2019, credit: Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun / Kyodo News Images

  • Product Code
  • ILEA000687854
  • Registered date
  • 2019/11/06 00:00:00
  • Credit
  • THE NIKKAN KOGYO SHIMBUN / Kyodo News Images
  • Media source
  • THE NIKKAN KOGYO SHIMBUN
  • Media size
  • 4608 × 2592 pixel
  • Resolution
  • 72 dpi
  • Deployment size
  • 5.44(MB)*
  • Special instruction
  • **The text may be generated by an automatic translation system**

*File size when opened in Photoshop, etc.

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