A microfluidic mixer with grooves placed on the top and bottom of the channel. Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • A new microfluidic mixer is presented consisting of a rectangular channel with grooves placed in the top and bottom. This not only increases the driving force behind the lateral flow, but allows for the formation of advection patterns that cannot be created with structures on the bottom alone. Chevrons, pointing in opposite directions on the top and bottom, are used to create a pair of vortices positioned side by side. Stripes running the width of the channel generate a pair of vertically stacked vortices. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations are used to model the behavior of the systems and provide velocity maps at cross-sections within the mixer. Experiments demonstrate the mixing that results when two segregated species enter the mixer side-by-side and pass through two cycles of the mixer (i.e., two alternating sets of four stripes and four chevrons).

published proceedings

  • Lab Chip

altmetric score

  • 6

author list (cited authors)

  • Howell, P. B., Mott, D. R., Fertig, S., Kaplan, C. R., Golden, J. P., Oran, E. S., & Ligler, F. S.

citation count

  • 114

complete list of authors

  • Howell, Peter B||Mott, David R||Fertig, Stephanie||Kaplan, Carolyn R||Golden, Joel P||Oran, Elaine S||Ligler, Frances S

publication date

  • May 2005