| Literature DB >> 31057892 |
Weijin Guo1, Jonas Hansson1, Wouter van der Wijngaart1.
Abstract
Capillary pumping is an attractive means of liquid actuation because it is a passive mechanism, i.e., it does not rely on an external energy supply during operation. The capillary flow rate generally depends on the liquid sample viscosity and surface energy. This poses a problem for capillary-driven systems that rely on a predictable flow rate and for which the sample viscosity or surface energy are not precisely known. Here, we introduce the capillary pumping of sample liquids with a flow rate that is constant in time and independent of the sample viscosity and sample surface energy. These features are enabled by a design in which a well-characterized pump liquid is capillarily imbibed into the downstream section of the pump and thereby pulls the unknown sample liquid into the upstream pump section. The downstream pump geometry is designed to exert a Laplace pressure and fluidic resistance that are substantially larger than those exerted by the upstream pump geometry on the sample liquid. Hence, the influence of the unknown sample liquid on the flow rate is negligible. We experimentally tested pumps of the new design with a variety of sample liquids, including water, different samples of whole blood, different samples of urine, isopropanol, mineral oil, and glycerol. The capillary filling speeds of these liquids vary by more than a factor 1000 when imbibed to a standard constant cross-section glass capillary. In our new pump design, 20 filling tests involving these liquid samples with vastly different properties resulted in a constant volumetric flow rate in the range of 20.96-24.76 μL/min. We expect this novel capillary design to have immediate applications in lab-on-a-chip systems and diagnostic devices.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 31057892 PMCID: PMC6220164 DOI: 10.1038/s41378-018-0002-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microsyst Nanoeng ISSN: 2055-7434 Impact factor: 7.127
Fig. 1Design and implementation of the capillary pump principle.
a The capillary flow of a sample liquid in a constant cross-section capillary depends on the sample liquid properties; b adding a second liquid, the pump liquid generates a flow dependency on both the sample liquid and the pump liquid; c creating a flow restrictor and decreasing the capillary cross-section in the pump liquid region generates a flow dependency solely on the pump liquid; d sketch of the capillary pump using three concatenated glass capillary tubes and precision cut nitrocellulose paper; and e photograph of a capillary pump.
Properties of lab and household liquids and their flow rates during capillary pumping
| Sample liquid properties | DI water | Ethanol | Isopropanol | Mineral oil | Glycerol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contact angle | 0° | 0° | 0° | 31.0° | 13.1° |
| Viscosity | 1.00[ | 1.07[ | 1.96[ | 68 | 1.412 × 103[ |
| Surface energy | 71.60 | 20.01 | 18.86 | 28.27 | 89.8 |
|
| 0.025 | 0.071 | 0.154 | 2.05 | 27.8 |
| Viscosity-independent pump speeda | 1 | 0.23 | 0.27 | 0.19 | 0.59 |
| Viscosity- and surface energy-independent pump speeda | 1 | 1.01 | 0.98 | 0.93 | 0.99 |
aThe pump speed is normalized based on the average measured pump speed for DI water.
Properties of clinical samples and their flow rates during capillary pumping
| Sample liquid properties | Blood sample 1 | Blood sample 2 | Blood sample 3 | Urine sample 1 | Urine sample 2 | Urine sample 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viscosity | 3–4[ | 52.32–59.46[ | ||||
| Surface energy | 52.32–59.46[ | 70–72[ | ||||
| Contact angle | 15.6° | 15.9° | 16.5° | 0° | 0° | 0° |
|
| 0.64 | 0.37 | 0.49 | 0.039 | 0.029 | 0.058 |
| Viscosity- and surface energy-independent pump speeda | 1.08 | 1.04 | 0.99 | 1.04 | 1.06 | 0.92 |
aThe pump speed is normalized based on the average measured pump speed for DI water.
Fig. 2a Measurements of the pumped sample volume versus time for our novel capillary pump. Solid lines are for visualization purposes only. b Capillary volumetric flow rate, Q, versus κ for the sample liquids tested in our novel capillary pump (solid markers) and in standard capillaries (hollow markers). The volumetric flow rate was determined as the ratio of the measured total pumped sample volume over the measured total pumping time. The value depicted for water is the average over ten measurements. c Zoomed view of the novel capillary pump flow rate results with the ten flow rate values for water plotted separately. The solid and dashed lines indicate the average flow rate for water and two times the standard deviation of the flow rate for water, respectively.