| Literature DB >> 31003548 |
Meng Zhang1,2, Wu Zhang3,4, Zhengwei Wu5, Yinan Shen6, Yicheng Chen7, Chaofeng Lan8, Fengchen Li9, Weihua Cai10.
Abstract
Fluid mixing plays an essential role in many microfluidic applications. Here, we compare the mixing in time pulsing flows for both a Newtonian fluid and a viscoelastic fluid at different pulsing frequencies. In general, the mixing degree in the viscoelastic fluid is higher than that in the Newtonian fluid. Particularly, the mixing in Newtonian fluid with time pulsing is decreased when the Reynolds number Re is between 0.002 and 0.01, while it is enhanced when Re is between 0.1 and 0.2 compared with that at a constant flow rate. In the viscoelastic fluid, on the other hand, the time pulsing does not change the mixing degree when the Weissenberg number Wi ≤ 20, while a larger mixing degree is realized at a higher pulsing frequency when Wi = 50.Entities:
Keywords: Newtonian fluid; microfluidic mixing; pulsed flow; viscoelastic fluid
Year: 2019 PMID: 31003548 PMCID: PMC6523434 DOI: 10.3390/mi10040262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1(a) The design and (b) the fabricated chip of the T-junction microfluidic mixer.
Figure 2(a) Concentration profile of Newtonian fluid at different constant flow rates; (b) the averaged mixing degree at different constant flow rate mixing.
Figure 3Averaged mixing degree of time pulsing Newtonian flow with different pulsing frequency at flow rates of (a) = 10 µL/h; (b) = 50 µL/h; (c) = 100 µL/h; (d) = 200 µL/h; (e) = 500 µL/h and (f) = 1000 µL/h.
Figure 4The instantaneous mixing degree of time pulsing flow with different frequency at flow rates of (a) = 50 µL/h; (b) = 200 µL/h; (c) = 500 µL/h at flow distance 2000 µm; (d) the concentration profiles at the peak-value and dip-value time instances when = 500 µL/h.
Figure 5Concentration profile of viscoelastic fluid at different constant flow rates of (a) = 10 µL/h; (b) = 50 µL/h; (c) = 100 µL/h; (d) = 200 µL/h; (e) = 500 µL/h and (f) = 1000 µL/h; (g) the averaged mixing degree of viscoelastic fluid at different constant flow rates mixing.
Figure 6Mixing degree at S2 = 2000 µm at different flow rates for both glycerol and polyacrylamide (PAM).
Figure 7Averaged mixing degree of time pulsing viscoelastic flow with different frequency at flow rates of (a) = 50 µL/h; (b) = 100 µL/h; (c) = 200 µL/h and (d) = 500 µL/h.
Figure 8Top: The instantaneous mixing degree along the flow distance at different flow times with a flow rate of 500 µL/h at a pulsing frequency of (a) 0 ; (b) 0.1 Hz; (c) 0.2 Hz and (d) 1 Hz. Bottom: The concentration profiles at the instance of A, B, C, and D, correspondingly.