| Literature DB >> 35208412 |
Stuart J Williams1, Joseph D Schneider1, Benjamin C King1, Nicolas G Green2.
Abstract
The electric curtain is a platform developed to lift and transport charged particles in air. Its premise is the manipulation of charged particles; however, fewer investigations isolate dielectric forces that are observed at lower voltages (i.e., less than the Paschen limit). This work focuses on observations of simultaneous dielectrophoretic and electrostatic forces. The electric curtain was a printed circuit board with interdigitated electrodes (0.020 inch width and spacing) coated with a layer of polypropylene, where a standing wave or travelling wave AC signal was applied (50 Hz) to produce an electric field below the Paschen limit. Soda lime glass beads (180-212 µm) demonstrated oscillatory rolling via dielectrophoretic forces. In addition, several particles simultaneously experienced rapid projectile repulsion, a behavior consistent with electrostatic phenomena. This second result is discussed as a particle-induced local increase in the electric field, with simulations demonstrating that a particle in close proximity to the curtain's surface produces a local field enhancement of over 2.5 times. The significance of this is that individual particles themselves can trigger electrostatic repulsion in an otherwise dielectric system. These results could be used for advanced applications where particles themselves provided triggered responses, perhaps for selective sorting of micrometer particles in air.Entities:
Keywords: dielectrophoresis; electric curtain; electrostatics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35208412 PMCID: PMC8878500 DOI: 10.3390/mi13020288
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1(top) Illustration of the electric curtain using four sequentially phase shifted signals at the same frequency applied to successive electrodes in an array. (bottom) Experimental results showing the initial and final dust distribution after the application of a 600 V, 50 Hz signal.
Figure 2(a) Illustration depicting electrode configurations for SW and TW fields. (b) Direction of positive DEP force ( > 0). (c) Direction of negative twDEP force ( < 0). Both (b,c) are modified from [25].
Figure 3(a) A portion of the time trial demonstrating oscillatory deflection of an AFM for a 50 Hz field. (b) AFM deflection as a function of voltage and position. Electrodes are illustrated as dark rectangles.
Figure 4Consecutive overlaid images over a 0.2 s interval (2 ms between images) for both SW and TW fields. (a) SW manipulation of glass spheres where both oscillatory rolling (blue arrows) and high velocity repulsion (red arrows) were observed. (b) TW manipulation where particles would roll slowly against the field (blue arrows) or be repelled rapidly in the direction of the applied field (red arrows).
Figure 5(a) Depiction of the simulation space (more details in Supplementary Material). (b) Magnitude of electric field at the indicated measurement point. As the gap decreases the localized electric field increases. (c) Numerical simulation result of the electric field magnitude near the particle for a gap of 100 µm; similarly for (d) 10 µm and (e) 1 µm gaps.