A Controlled Release Microchip






Refer to release, "MIT microchip releases chemicals on demand"

A commentary by:

John T. Santini, Jr. (Graduate Student, Dept. of Chemical Engineering),
Michael J. Cima (Sumitomo Electric Industries Professor of Ceramic Processing),
Robert Langer (Kenneth J. Germeshausen Professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering).

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139

January 20, 1999

Contact Information


We've developed a microchip that has the ability to store a large number of drugs or chemicals, control the time at which release begins, and control the rate at which the chemicals are released, all without moving parts. The microchip could be integrated with a tiny power supply and controlled by a microprocessor, remote control, or biosensors. This microchip technology has potential uses in areas such as medical diagnostics, chemical detection, combinatorial chemistry, drug delivery, cosmetics, and entertainment.

What are the microchip's applications?

The microchip could be used in any application where precise amounts of one or more compounds must be released at specific times and at specific rates. For example, this technology could be used to develop hand-held devices for medical diagnostics or chemical detection and microfluidic devices for combinatorial chemistry or microbiology.

In drug delivery applications, for example, this microchip may someday be used in the development of an autonomous, controlled release implant ("pharmacy-on-a-chip") or a highly controllable tablet ("smart tablet") for oral drug delivery.

Although the prototype microchip requires contact with a small amount of solution to operate, we have ideas for developing chips that can function without contacting a solution. This may lead to the development of microchips for use in televisions or jewelry that release scents in response to signals sent through television cable or changes in the skin's salinity, respectively.

What is novel about the microchip?

It is the first device of its kind enabling the storage of one or more compounds inside of the microchip in any form (solid, liquid, or gel), with the release of the compounds achieved on demand and with no moving parts.

What sparked the invention of the microchip?

Dr. Robert Langer, Kenneth J. Germeshausen Professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering at MIT, conceived of the microchip idea while watching a documentary on the mass production of microchips. He envisioned numerous applications for a microchip that could controllably release chemicals or drugs. He thought, for example, that it may be possible to create a microchip that would be placed in televisions that could release scents corresponding to the picture shown on the screen.

What was an exciting moment in the research?

Witnessing the first demonstration of the release of a compound from the microchip was exciting. However, there were not many sudden leaps. Instead, progress over the years has been steady. We encountered numerous technical challenges along the way such as material selection, process design, and reservoir filling issues, but we were able to develop solutions for each of these.

How does the microchip work?

The microchip contains a large number of reservoirs, each covered by a thin membrane of a material that serves as an anode in an electrochemical reaction. There are other electrodes on the surface of the microchip that serve as cathodes in an electrochemical reaction. Each reservoir is filled with a compound for release. When release from a particular reservoir is desired, an electrical voltage (approximately 1 volt) is applied between the anode covering that reservoir and a cathode. The anode membrane dissolves due to an electrochemical reaction. This reservoir is now open, allowing the material inside to diffuse out into the surrounding fluid. Each reservoir on the microchip can be activated and opened individually, allowing complex release patterns to be achieved.

In the prototype device, the membrane anodes and the cathodes are made of a thin layer (approximately 0.3 mm) of gold. Application of approximately 1 volt to the gold membrane anode in a solution containing a small amount of chloride ion (such as that found in any biological fluid) causes the membrane to dissolve in less than 10 seconds. The material in the reservoir is then free to release into the surrounding fluid.

How are the reservoirs controlled individually?

Each reservoir on the prototype microchip can be activated individually because each anode has its own independent connection to the power source. As the number of reservoirs on a microchip becomes large, it should be possible to connect each anode to the power supply through a demultiplexer. The demultiplexer serves as a "routing station" by directing power to a particular reservoir based on a code sent to the demultiplexer by a microprocessor or remote control.

Size of the prototype device

The prototype device is approximately the size of a United States dime. A device this size could theoretically contain over 1000 reservoirs. However, the microchips could easily be made much smaller or much larger, depending on the particular application.

Our respective contributions to the project

Dr. Robert Langer, Kenneth J. Germeshausen Professor of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering at MIT, conceived of the microchip idea while watching a documentary on the mass production of microchips. He envisioned numerous applications for a microchip that could controllably release chemicals or drugs.

He contacted Dr. Michael Cima, Sumitomo Electric Industries Professor of Ceramic Processing at MIT, about collaborating on the development of such a technology. Dr. Cima proposed that the microchip's release mechanism be based on the electrochemical dissolution of a thin metal membrane.

While still a junior at the University of Michigan, John T. Santini Jr., now a doctoral student in chemical engineering at MIT, began work on the project in 1993 as a student in the MIT Materials Processing Center's Summer Scholars Program. Beginning with the initial microchip concept, John developed a process for fabricating controlled release microchips, designed experiments demonstrating proof-of-principle release of chemicals from prototype microchips, and found solutions for a number of the technical challenges that were encountered while developing the prototype device.

What were some of the technical challenges encountered while developing the microchip and how were they overcome?

Has this microchip technology been patented?

A broad United States patent (#5,797,898) covering this microchip technology was issued on August 25, 1998 to John T. Santini Jr., Michael J. Cima, Robert Langer, and Achim M. Göpferich, an MIT visiting scientist during the early stages of the project now at the Lehrstuhl Für Pharmazeutische Technologie Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg. There are currently two patents pending; a U.S. patent on the fabrication of the microchips (Santini, Cima, and Langer), and a foreign patent covering all aspects of the microchip technology (Santini, Cima, Langer, and Göpferich).
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CONTACT:

Elizabeth Thomson
MIT News Office
(617) 258-5402
thomson@mit.edu


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