4.6 Article

Numerical and Experimental Study of Cross-Sectional Effects on the Mixing Performance of the Spiral Microfluidics

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi12121470

Keywords

3D printing; spiral micromixers; dean flow; trapezoidal cross-section; mixing index; convection and diffusion

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP170103704, DP180103003]
  2. National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1143377]

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The study evaluated the mixing performance of spiral micromixers with different channel cross-sections, showing that a large-angle outward trapezoidal cross-section provides the highest mixing efficiency of up to 95%. The relatively low pressure drop makes these spiral micromixers ideal candidates for various lab-on-chip applications.
Mixing at the microscale is of great importance for various applications ranging from biological and chemical synthesis to drug delivery. Among the numerous types of micromixers that have been developed, planar passive spiral micromixers have gained considerable interest due to their ease of fabrication and integration into complex miniaturized systems. However, less attention has been paid to non-planar spiral micromixers with various cross-sections and the effects of these cross-sections on the total performance of the micromixer. Here, mixing performance in a spiral micromixer with different channel cross-sections is evaluated experimentally and numerically in the Re range of 0.001 to 50. The accuracy of the 3D-finite element model was first verified at different flow rates by tracking the mixing index across the loops, which were directly proportional to the spiral radius and were hence also proportional to the Dean flow. It is shown that higher flow rates induce stronger vortices compared to lower flow rates; thus, fewer loops are required for efficient mixing. The numerical study revealed that a large-angle outward trapezoidal cross-section provides the highest mixing performance, reaching efficiencies of up to 95%. Moreover, the velocity/vorticity along the channel length was analyzed and discussed to evaluate channel mixing performance. A relatively low pressure drop (<130 kPa) makes these passive spiral micromixers ideal candidates for various lab-on-chip applications.

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