Microfluidics
Microfluidics
Microfluidics
MICROFLUIDICS
Professor Eugenia Kumacheva
Microfluidics istheareaofscienceandtechnologythatisfocusedon
simpleorcomplex, complex mono ormultiphasicflowsthatarecirculatingin naturalorartificialmicro systemswithatleast,onedimensionof below500m(sometimesbelow1000m)
Microfluidicsystemsinnature
Atreebringing b i i waterand dnutrients i tothe h l leavesvia i acomplex l networkofcapillaries
Acapillary ill network t kof fhundreds h d d of f thousandsofmicrochannelswithdiameters between100m(inthetrunk)and10sof nm(in (i the th leaf). l f)
Thehydrodynamicsofthesystem:theabilityofthe capillariestodeformundertheeffectofpressure),the significanceofcapillaryeffectsandredundancy (ifone capillarydies,anothertakesitsplace).
Bloodcirculation
Vennermannetal.Exp.Fluids(2007)42,495
Manmadesystems.WhyMicro?
1. Uniquephysicalandchemicaleffects,massandheattransfer characteristics 2.Smallvolumesofexpensiveand/ordangerousreagents 3 Paralleloperation 3. 4.Portability,integration(reactions,separation,detection) 5.Implantingmicrofluidicdevicesinbiologicalsystems 6.Compatibilitywithothermicro/nanoscaledevices
Focusof fMicrofluidics f
Phenomena Components Systems Applications
Cellbiology
1990s:birthofmicrofluidics
300m
Microfluidic screening
Velocity V l it profile fil i in a microchannel i h l with ith aspect t ratio ti 2 2:5 5f for pressure driven flow (calculation using Coventorware software.
http://faculty.washington.edu/yagerp/microfluidicstutorial/basicconcepts/basicconcepts.htm
P1
P
P2
P1
Hydrodynamic resistance
P = RhQ
P2
Q is the volumetric flow rate of the liquid, P is pressure drop, Rh is the h d d hydrodynamic i resistance i t ( (analogous l t to th the electrokinetic l t ki ti l law U=IR U IR) Channel with a circular cross-section (total length L, radius R): Channel with a rectangular cross-section (width w and height h, h<w)
Rh increases as the system size decreases In a network of channels Rh can be computed as in electrokinetics: two channels in series have a resistance two channels in parallel have a resistance
Electrokinetic Flow If the walls of a microchannel have a charge, an electric double layer of counter ions will form at the walls. When an electric field is applied across the length of the channel, th ions the i in i the th double d bl layer l move towards t d the th electrode l t d of f opposite it polarity. l it Thi This creates t motion of the fluid near the walls and transfers via viscous forces into convective motion of the bulk fluid. Anode Cathode For the channel open at the electrodes, the velocity profile is uniform across the entire width of the channel channel. Anode Cathode
For a closed channel, a recirculation pattern forms, in which a fluid along the center of the pp to that channel moves in a direction opposite at the walls.
dV
v(x(t),t)
Momentumequationin3D(vectornotation):
Nabla operator
Accelerationovertime
v(x,t1)
t=t1
v(x,t2) t=t t t2
flow
Accelerationalongastreamline
Increaseofthefluidvelocityduetomassconservation Fluidhastobeacceleratedalongthestreamline
v(x(t),t)
flow
lefthandside Changeinmomentum(Newton)
duetochangeofvelocityovertime atagivenlocation duetoaccelerationoffluide.g. whenmovingintosmallerflow channelcrosssections(alsoin stationarycases)
righthandside Forcesactingonfluid
pressuregradient frictionforces volumeforces
Pressuregradient
p+p
Bodyforce(=volumeforce)
Actuation of fluid by the body force: force fvolume acts in the volume itself Body forces: centrifugal forces gravity forces electrostatic forces
fvolume
Example1:staticpressureundergravity
OnlygravityisconsideredinNSequation
Stationaryflow(v=const (v=const.): ):
frictioniszero(nomotion) accelerationiszero(dv/dt=0)
Result:
dp p = g dy
Example1:forwaterinamicrochannel:
= 1000kg/m3 g = 9.81m/s2 h = 100m
Friction
Frictionaffectsthemotion(velocity)ofthefluid
vz(x) z x
Reynoldsnumber(Re)
Approximatefrictionenergy Approximatekineticenergy
E friction F friction
v v l = Al = V l l
E kin m v 2
Ekin mv l lv = = = Re E friction vV
2
Reynolds number is the ratio of work spent on acceleration to energy dissipated by friction (A more general definition: Re a dimensionless number that gives the ratio of inertial forces (characterizing how much a particular fluid resists to motion) to viscous forces.
Simplificationsinmicrofluidics
v + ( v ) v = p + 2 v + f volum e , g t
Gravityisneglected Influenceofconvectionissmall, , (v )v 0, i.e. weassumethatthereisnoconvective momentumtransport Ifadditionallyastationaryflowisconsidered
Poissonequation(drivingpressureandfrictionarebalancedinastationarylaminarflow):
v + ( v ) v = p + 2 v + g t
Re* ~ 2300
CriticalReynoldsnumber
Critical Re* corresponds to a critical velocity v*
v = Re l
* *
Typically Re* is in the range of 2300 For a microdevice v* is hardly reached (l = 100 m v* 25 m/s) As Re increases further, the turbulent character of flow increases
http://strc.herts.ac.uk/mm/micromixers.html http://alcheme.tamu.edu/?page_id=6720
Laminar flow means that diffusion is the only mechanism to achieve mixing between parallel fluid streams. This is a slow process.
Laplace law
Droplet
Pressure drops caused by capillarity are ~ l-1 while those due to viscosity scale as l0
The capillary number, Ca, represents the relative effect of viscous forces versus surface tension acting g across an interface between a liquid q and a g gas, , or between two immiscible liquids
Summary
NSequation ti i isd derived i db byamomentum t b balance l f fora continuumelement ForNewtonian,incompressible fluidstheNSequationis
Summary(cont)
For Re < Re * the flow is laminar For Re > Re * the flow is turbulent In microfluidics we (usually) assume No gravity Incompressibility Dominance D i of f viscous i f forces Capillarity plays an important role in microfluidics microfluidics, as represented nu small Capillary numbers
http://www.micronit.com/images/Cust_chips.jpg
Speed matters!
5) Seal Sea to substrate subst ate SU-8 Si Wafer Photomask PDMS prepolymer
MIXING IN MICROFLUIDICS
Mixinginmicrofluidics
No turbulence in microfluidics microfluidics. Mixing occurs by diffusion diffusion. Little or no mixing mixing. A dimensionless number, analogous to the Reynolds number, is Peclet number
Pe = Ul/D ~
advection diffusion
Diffusion time for a 100 m wide channel (for a molecule such as fluorescein):
Mixingbydiffusion
Cleversolutions
Posts The distributive micromixer N
Hydrodynamic focusing
Chaoticmixerformicrochannels
To generate transverse flows in microchannels, i h l ridges id were placed l d on the floor of the channel at an oblique angle, with respect to the long axis (y) of the channel
Crosschannelmixer
Generationofdroplets
A and B are two immiscible liquids Narrow size distribution High frequency of droplet generation Control of droplet morphology (double emulsions)
Flowfocusing
48 42 36 30 20 30 40 Q w (ml/h) 50
dm (m) do ( m)
Qw (mL/h)
d is the average diameter of the coaxial jet d0 = (1.5 breakup d2)1/3
112 (m) m) do d(
0
96 80 64
d0 is the average diameter of droplets Z. Nie et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 127, 8058 (2005)
20
Qw (mL/h)
30 40 Q w(ml/h)
50
a) Dimension (m) 150 100 50 0 16 b) Dime ension (m) 150 100 50 0 0.16 c) Dim mension (m) 150 100 50 0 0.04
Water
40
CORES
Core
24
32 Qw(ml/h)
40
48
30
CORE-SHELL
Core-shell
Oil 1
%
0.32 0.40 0.48 0.56
20
10
0.24
0 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110
Qm(ml/h)
Oil 2
Diameter (
m)
0.05
0.08
0.09
Interfacial wavelength
9.02d jet
1/ 2 ~ (Qdisp / Q ) di cont
m / o n
n - 1 < m / o < n
n is the number of monodisperse oil cores per capsule n is the number of polydisperse oil cores per capsule
m is breakup wavelength of monomer jet
n - 1 < m / o < n
M
D D
tot al
0.4
/Q
0.6
'/
Q 0.6
al tot
0. 4
A A
0.2
F F
I I
H H
0.8
G G
E E
B B
0.6 0.4
C C
0.2
1.0
1.0
0.8
Q o' / Q total
WATER
UV irradiation UV-irradiation
Polymer microbeads
(d)
(e)
SShape andmorphologycontrol
(f)
100 m
58
100 m
Qm1/Qm2
1/2
1/1
2/1
Ismagilov, 2005
Agarose solution
R G
37 oC
A li ti Applications:
woundhealing tissue i engineering i i inhibitionofcancerspreading Qtor =QG+QR =const ChangetheratioQG/QR
Soy bean oil
Microgels
61 61
4 day
Embryoidbodies Cellcoculture
(YC5 Mouse Embryonic Stem cells) Scalebaris100m
62
Books P Tabeling. P. Tabeling Introduction to Microfluidics. Microfluidics Microfluidics for Biotechnology - J.Berthier P.Silberzan Micro and NanoFlows (2-nd edition of Karnadiakiss book) Reviews: -H.Stone, A.Stroock, A.Ajdari, Ann.Rev.Fluid Mech, 36, 381(2004) - S.Quake, T.Squire, Microfluidics : Fluid Physics at the microscale(2005) -Analytical A l ti l Chemistry, Ch i t L Lab b on a Chip Chi - P.A.Auroux, D.Iossifids, D.Reyes, A.Manz, Anal.Chem,74, 2637 (2002) - Huck et al. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 49, 5846-5868 (2010)