RE: Coloured or fluorescent liquids for microfluidics?
Garyantes, Tina
1999-03-11
Dear Sung Jin,
I would recommend looking in the Molecular Probes Catalog. They have a wide
variety of fluorophores. The most commonly used is fluorescein. It is
readily available from lots of people such at Sigma or Molecular Probes.
You will need a fluorescent set up to see it. You might be able to work
with tartrazine but I am guessing it would be too weak. Tartrazine would be
colorimetric.
Tina Garyantes
> ----------
> From: Sung Jin
> Reply To: Sung Jin;[email protected]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 1999 8:20 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Coloured or fluorescent liquids for microfluidics?
>
> Dear MEMS community,
>
> I would like to test a microfluidic device. For this I would
> like to render the fluid very visible, to a camera, like many
> famous pictures of coloured or fluorescent liquid in capillaries.
>
> My problem is that I do not know what kind of liquid does that.
> If anybody knows the answer, please help me.
> I would appreciate knowing the commercial name of the agent,
> and if there is any special procedures to use it (is it mixed
> in water? or alcohol?).
>
> Thank you very much!
>
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