4.8 Article

Hydrodynamic Tweezers: Impact of Design Geometry on Flow and Microparticle Trapping

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 84, Issue 4, Pages 1963-1968

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac203002z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [DGE-0654252]
  2. Boeing-Sutter Endowment

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Here we explore the role of microfabricated device geometry on frequency-dependent low Reynolds number steady streaming flow and particle trapping behavior. In our system, flow and particle trapping is induced near an obstruction or cavity located in an otherwise rectilinear oscillating flow of frequency omega and amplitude is in a fluid of kinematic viscosity nu. This work expands prior studies to characterize nine distinct obstruction/cavity geometries. The imaged microeddy flows show that the device geometry affects the eddy number, shape, structure, and strength. Comparison of measured particle trap locations with the computed eddy flow structure shows that particles trap closer to the wall than the eddy core. Trapping strength and location are controlled by the geometry and the oscillation frequency. In most cases, the trapping behavior is linearly proportional to the Stokes layer thickness, delta(AC) similar to O((nu/omega)(1/2)). We show that steady streaming in microfluidic eddies can be a flexible and versatile method for noncontact microparticle trapping, and hence we call this class of devices hydrodynamic tweezers.

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