Flexible microfluidic chips have good application prospects in situations with easy bending and complex curvature. An important factor affecting the flexible microfluidic chip is its structural complexity. For example, the hybrid chip includes flow channels, mixing chambers, and one-way valves. How to achieve the same function with as few structures as possible has become an important research topic at present. In this paper, a Tesla valve micromixer with unidirectional flow characteristics is presented. A passive laminar flow Tesla valve micromixer is fabricated through 3D printing technology and limonene dissolution method. The main process is as follows: First of all, high impact polystyrene (HIPS) material was employed to make the Tesla valve channel mold. Second, the channel mold was dissolved in the limonene solvent. The mold of Tesla micromixer is made of HIPS material, the mixing experiment displace that the Tesla valve micromixer is characterized by unidirectional flow compared with the common T-shaped planar channel. At the same time, the 5-AAC Tesla valve micromixer can increase the mixing efficiency to 87%. By using four different groove structures and different flow rates of the mixing effect experiment, the conclusion is that the mixing efficiency of the 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixer is up to 0.89 when the flow rate is 2 mL/min. The results manifest that the Tesla valve structure can effectively improve the mixing efficiency.
Flexible microfluidic chips have good application prospects in situations with easy bending and complex curvature. An important factor affecting the flexible microfluidic chip is its structural complexity. For example, the hybrid chip includes flow channels, mixing chambers, and one-way valves. How to achieve the same function with as few structures as possible has become an important research topic at present. In this paper, a Tesla valve micromixer with unidirectional flow characteristics is presented. A passive laminar flow Tesla valve micromixer is fabricated through 3D printing technology and limonene dissolution method. The main process is as follows: First of all, high impact polystyrene (HIPS) material was employed to make the Tesla valve channel mold. Second, the channel mold was dissolved in the limonene solvent. The mold of Tesla micromixer is made of HIPS material, the mixing experiment displace that the Tesla valve micromixer is characterized by unidirectional flow compared with the common T-shaped planar channel. At the same time, the 5-AAC Tesla valve micromixer can increase the mixing efficiency to 87%. By using four different groove structures and different flow rates of the mixing effect experiment, the conclusion is that the mixing efficiency of the 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixer is up to 0.89 when the flow rate is 2 mL/min. The results manifest that the Tesla valve structure can effectively improve the mixing efficiency.
As an important part of
microsystems, micromixers are mainly used
to realize efficient mixing of two or more different reactants in
the microscale space.[1,9] Currently, common micromixers
maintain one-way flow by attaching an energy field to the outside
of the flow channel.[17]In recent
years, microfluidic drive by micro–nano devices
such as micropump and microvalve has attracted wide attention; Amirhesam
et al. studied a pneumatic peristaltic micropump.[4] The thermoplastic polyurethane elastomer rubber elastic
film is deformed, and the fluid channel below is squeezed. The three
actuators work in a specific sequence to realize one-way transportation
of the fluid.In order to enable the micromixer to be stably
controlled according
to a specific time series,[20] Feng et al.
developed a cam linear peristaltic micropump.[5] Soft lithography was used to fabricate flexible microfluidic pipes,[18] and 3D printing technology was used to fabricate
a microcam follower system. The microfluidic channel is compressed
synchronously by three microcam follower systems with different phase
angles relative to the camshaft, and the pump has the advantages of
simple structure and easy to control.Jang et al. studied valveless
electromagnetic travelling wave micropumps
composed of polymethyl methacrylate, PDMS, and other materials.[7] The pump drives the micropipe fluid through a
permanent magnet and moves in a travelling wave manner and has the
advantages of fast response and high efficiency.The peristaltic
micropump proposed by Smits is fabricated using
a MEMS process. This micropump has three piezoelectric actuators,[16] which are energized in sequence, and the six-step
sequence is used for peristaltic transmission with a maximum flow
rate of 3 μL/min.Yu et al. designed a piezoelectric-driven
peristaltic
micropump.[19] The system consists of a 12
V power supply, a microprocessor, a differential amplifier, a phase
controller, an analog-to-digital converter, and so forth. By studying
the dynamic behavior of the diaphragm and comparatively analyzing
the influence of different phase signal changes on the performance,
the results show that the maximum reverse pressure can reach 520 Pa.ChanJeong proposed a thermoelectric peristaltic micropump.[8] The diameter of the actuator diaphragm is 205
mm, and the thickness is 30 μm. When the input voltage is 20
V and the driving frequency is 2 Hz, the maximum flow rate of the
micropump is about 0.36 μL/s.Although these micropumps
have the characteristics of rapid response
and unidirectional flow of reagents, the fluid inside the micropump
is exposed to the electric field, magnetic field, sound field, and
thermal field. Experimental results have an impact. At the same time,
the manufacturing process of the micropump is complicated and the
cost is high, the integrated micropump is not easy to clean, and there
are risks such as cross-contamination. In view of the above problems,
combined with the 3D printing technology and the polymer dissolution
technology, this paper proposes a new Tesla valve structure micromixer.
A micromixer with a one-way flow characteristic of the Tesla valve
channel is produced without keys and other processing steps. At the
same time, the hybrid efficiency curve is obtained through the simulation
of three kinds of structures. Furthermore, the unidirectional flow
of the micromixer and the influence of different flow rate groove
structures on the mixing efficiency are verified by experiments. Finally,
a unidirectional flow-through Tesla valve micromixer with high efficiency
was fabricated.
Preparation and Experiment
Figure demonstrates
the fabrication principle of the Tesla valve structure micromixer.
The micromixer is fabricated by 3D printing technology. It is worth
noting that the channel of the mixer is achieved by dissolving the
HIPS mold material through limonene. The specific production process
and data are shown in Table .[11]
Manufacturing Steps and Data of 3D
Tesla Valve Micromixer
steps
the production process
specific methods and parameters
step (a) and (b)
printing the HIPS
mold
using 3D printing and HIPS to print
Tesla valve molds
step (c)
printing the PLA framework
and casting
3D printing technology is employed to fabricate
the PLA framework
with the size of 5 × 2 × 1.5 cm. Then PDMS is poured into the molds. Heat curing is carried out
with the temperature of 80° and the storage time is 20 min
step (d)
punching the holes
the chip is perforated with a 2 mm diameter hole punch
step (e)
dissolving the microchannel mold in limonene
solvent
limonene (the concentration of 99%) is used
to dissolve the
channel and the dissolution time is 30 min
step (f)
completing the chip
a micro mixer with the Tesla valve micro-channel is fabricated.
Fluid Flow Characteristics and Efficiency
Advantages of Tesla Structures
Figure I demonstrates the comparison of simulation
efficiency between the T-channel and Tesla valve micromixer.[3,5,10] When Re is between
20 and 60, the mixing efficiency of the Tesla valve micromixer gradually
decreases with the increase of Reynolds number. When Re is between 60 and 100, with the increase of Reynolds number, the
mixing efficiency of the Tesla valve micromixer gradually increases.
When Re is between 20 and 60, the mixer is not easy
to work due to the large viscous force and small inertia force of
the fluid. At this time, the mixing efficiency decreases with the
increase of Re. When Re is between
60 and 100, the mixing speed of the two fluids accelerates obviously
with the increase of the inertia force. The increased mixing speed
increases the inertia effect of the fluid, so the mixing time of the
microchannel is shortened and the mixing efficiency is accelerated. Figure II shows the mixing
model of ions in the diffusion process. In Figure II, since the mixing area of the main channel
of the Tesla valve micromixer is relatively flat, the movement intensity
of the fluid in the channel is small and the lateral diffusion of
the molecules is not severe, which ultimately makes the mixing effect
of the fluid worse. When the fluid is in the annular auxiliary channel,
the velocity and force of the fluid at the bend varies greatly. According
to eqs and 2, the change of velocity will increase the momentum
of motion, increase the degree of convection, and increase the friction
force generated by viscosity, thereby strengthening the shearing effect
of the fluid and improving the mixing efficiency. is the frictional force due to viscosity;
−∇·P is the force due to the pressure
gradient; F⃗ is the external force acting
on the fluid; P is the internal pressure of the fluid; u⃗ is the fluid flow vector velocity.
Figure 2
(I) Comparison of mixing
efficiency between the T-type structure
and 5-AAC (annular auxiliary channel and trunk channel) Tesla valve
structure at different Reynolds numbers; (II) ionic diffusion mixing
model of the Tesla valve structure micromixer. (a––d)
are partial enlarged views of the ion diffusion model of the annular
auxiliary channel and the main channel.
(I) Comparison of mixing
efficiency between the T-type structure
and 5-AAC (annular auxiliary channel and trunk channel) Tesla valve
structure at different Reynolds numbers; (II) ionic diffusion mixing
model of the Tesla valve structure micromixer. (a––d)
are partial enlarged views of the ion diffusion model of the annular
auxiliary channel and the main channel.When Re is the same, the maximum
mixing efficiency
difference between the Tesla valve channel and T-channel is close
to 16%. The calculation method of mixing efficiency is as follows[3]where N is the number of
selected points; W is the fluid mass fraction corresponding
to the node on the monitoring surface; cm is the fluid mass fraction corresponding to the point of full fluid
mixing on the monitoring surface; σ is the deviation of the
mass fraction of the fluid on the monitoring surface without mixing. M is the mixed intensity, and the value is 0–1. The
Tesla valve micromixer has a complex channel shape. When the two liquids
flow in the channel, the polygonal groove will increase the molecular
diffusion, resulting in a more drastic change in the liquid flow.
Compared with the planar T-type structure, the Tesla valve micro mixer
has a stronger mixing performance.
Research on the Tesla Channel Structure and
the Mixing Efficiency
In order to study the relationship
between the fluid mixing efficiency and the structure in the Tesla
valve channel, first, three 3D geometric models of Tesla valve with
different number of grooves were drawn with SolidWorks, and then numerical
simulation was imported. The simulation divided the calculation area
into grids to carry out network division of the Tesla valve structure.
The specific table data is shown in Table .
Table 2
Numerical Model Detailed Information
property
value
mesh vertices
154,674
number of elements
201,414
minimum element quality
0.0383
average element quality
0.65
element volume ratio
5.446 × 10–4
mesh volume (mm3)
75.4
Figure shows the
mixing simulation data under different grooves at a flow rate of 0.5
mL/min. Figure I shows
the simulated mixing efficiency value of the micromixer with a length
of 10–70 mm in a 4-AAC Tesla valve structure at a flow rate
of 0.5 mL/min. As the size of the micromixer gets longer and longer,
the mixing efficiency increases. This is because the larger the size
of the micro mixer, the longer the mixing time of the fluid in the
channel, which increases the contact time of the fluid and improves
the mixing efficiency. Figure II,III simulates the mixing efficiency values of 5- and 6-AAC
structures at 0.5 mL/min flow rate. As the number of AAC increases,
the two high-concentration fluids cross and stretch at the boundary
of the micromixer, thus increasing the contact area between each other,
enhancing the mixing of fluids, and leading to the increase of mixing
efficiency. Figure IV shows the comparison diagram of simulation trends of the three
AAC structures. Finally, it is concluded that the mixing efficiency
of the 70 mm micromixer with 6-AAC structures is 87% when the flow
rate is 0.5 mL/min.
Figure 3
Hybrid simulation diagram of the Tesla valve structure
micromixer
at 0.5 mL/min. A–G represents the end point of the micromixer
at 10–70 mm nodes. The color legend represents the solution
concentration. (I) Mixing efficiency value of the micromixer in a
4-AAC Tesla valve structure. (II) Mixing efficiency value of the micromixer
in a 5-AAC Tesla valve structure. (III) Mixing efficiency value of
the micromixer in a 6-AAC Tesla valve structure. (IV) Mixing efficiency
value of the micromixer in 4-, 5-, and 6-AAC Tesla valve structures.
Hybrid simulation diagram of the Tesla valve structure
micromixer
at 0.5 mL/min. A–G represents the end point of the micromixer
at 10–70 mm nodes. The color legend represents the solution
concentration. (I) Mixing efficiency value of the micromixer in a
4-AAC Tesla valve structure. (II) Mixing efficiency value of the micromixer
in a 5-AAC Tesla valve structure. (III) Mixing efficiency value of
the micromixer in a 6-AAC Tesla valve structure. (IV) Mixing efficiency
value of the micromixer in 4-, 5-, and 6-AAC Tesla valve structures.Figure shows the
mixing simulation data under different grooves at a flow rate of 1
mL/min. Figure I shows
the simulated mixing efficiency value of the micromixer with a length
of 10–70 mm in a 4-AAC Tesla valve structure at a flow rate
of 1 mL/min. Figure II,III simulates the mixing efficiency values of 5- and 6-AAC structures
at 1 mL/min flow rate. When Re is between 20 and
60, as the Reynolds number increases, the mixing efficiency of the
Tesla valve micromixer gradually decreases. When Re is between 60 and 100, the mixing efficiency of the Tesla valve
micromixer gradually increases with the increase of Reynolds number.
When Re is between 20 and 60, due to the large viscous
force of the fluid and the small inertial force, the increase of the
Reynolds number at this time will not increase the mixing efficiency.[21] When Re is between 60 and 100,
with the increase of the Reynolds number, it can be seen from formula that the Reynolds
number is proportional to the flow. Other things being equal, the
Reynolds number increases with the flow. When the Reynolds number
is large, chaotic fluid is produced. Mixing efficiency does not increase
monotonically with the flow rate but increases with the flow rate
when the fluid density, channel characteristic size, and dynamic viscosity
are constant. As the flow rate increases, the mixing efficiency increases.
Because when the flow rate increases, the mixing state dependent on
molecular diffusion is broken, chaotic convection occurs in the groove
channel to a certain extent, and the mixing efficiency is improved.where ρ is the density of the fluid, v is the characteristic velocity of the fluid, d is the characteristic dimension of the channel, and v is the dynamic viscosity of the fluid. Figure C compares the mixing
efficiency of the T-shaped configuration with the 5-AAC (annular auxiliary
channel and main channel) Tesla valve configuration at different Reynolds
numbers.
Figure 4
Hybrid simulation diagram of the Tesla valve structure micromixer
at 1 mL/min. A–G represents the end point of the micromixer
at 10–70 mm nodes, respectively. The color legend represents
the solution concentration. (I) Mixing efficiency value of the micromixer
in a 4-AAC Tesla valve structur. (II) Mixing efficiency value of the
micromixer in a 5-AAC Tesla valve structure. (III) Mixing efficiency
value of the micromixer in a 6-AAC Tesla valve structure. (IV) Mixing
efficiency value of the micromixer in 4-, 5-, and 6-AAC Tesla valve
structures.
Hybrid simulation diagram of the Tesla valve structure micromixer
at 1 mL/min. A–G represents the end point of the micromixer
at 10–70 mm nodes, respectively. The color legend represents
the solution concentration. (I) Mixing efficiency value of the micromixer
in a 4-AAC Tesla valve structur. (II) Mixing efficiency value of the
micromixer in a 5-AAC Tesla valve structure. (III) Mixing efficiency
value of the micromixer in a 6-AAC Tesla valve structure. (IV) Mixing
efficiency value of the micromixer in 4-, 5-, and 6-AAC Tesla valve
structures.The laminar flow model and the thin layer mass
transfer model were
used for numerical simulation. In the simulation, the wall of the
microchannel is set as a nonslip boundary condition, and no pressure
is set at the outlet. The flow field is obtained by Navier-Stokes[2,14] equations, and the fluid mixing is obtained by convection-diffusion
equations, as shown in eqns 5 and 6ρ is the fluid density, η
is the hydrodynamic viscosity, P is the fluid pressure, V is the velocity
vector, C is the concentration, and D is the intermolecular diffusion coefficient. The Tesla valve structure
can achieve the maximum mixing efficiency of 0.885. The numerical
definition parameters and boundary condition settings involved in
simulation are shown in Tables and 4.
Table 3
Numerical Simulation of Boundary Conditions
entry 1
entry 2
exit
wall
surface
the flow field
P = 0
P = 0
P = 0
u = 0
ion concentration field
c1 = 1 mol/m3
c2 = 2 mol/m3
n = 0
Table 4
Numerical Simulation of Variable Parameters
the serial number
cross-sectional area of the channel
number of grooves
viscosity coefficient
1
200 × 200 μm
4
8.55 × 10–4
2
5
3
6
Results and Discussion
Tesla Channel Unidirectional Flow Experiment
Before the mixing efficiency experiment, first the Tesla valve
structure is verified for the characteristics of single flow. Figure and Table present the production process
of a single flow experiment. Figure shows the influence of different flows on pressure
and the diagram of experimental devices. Figure I is the forward pressure at different flows,
and Figure II is the
reverse pressure at different flows. It can be seen that the pressure
increases with the increase of flow. As the pipeline resistance is
proportional to the square of the flow, the flow accelerates, the
pipeline resistance increases, and the pressure increases. Figure III is the ratio
of forward pressure to reverse pressure at different flows. The equation
of pressure ratio is shown as[7]
Figure 5
Unidirectional flow test procedure.
Table 5
Unidirectional Flow Test Procedure
steps
the experimental process
specific methods and steps
step 1
building experimental platform
the equipment is formed from (composed of) water faucet, flow
gauge, pressure gauge, and Tesla valve structure mold
step 2
measuring inlet flow velocity
flow velocity is measured by flow gauge
step 3
measuring inlet pressure ΔPf
inlet pressure is measured by pressure
gauge at different flow
velocity (rates). The pressure gauge is placed on the left of the
model
step 4
measuring outlet
pressure ΔPr
outlet
pressure is measured by pressure gauge at different
flow velocities. The pressure gauge is placed on the right of the
model
step 5
calculating pressure
ratio Di
calculating the
ratio of the positive pressure to reverse pressure.
When ΔPf > ΔPr, it is proved that the device has good forward flow.
When ΔPf < ΔPr, the device has poor forward flow
step 6
following the above method to measure
other data and calculating
calculating the pressure
ratios of the other two structures
as described above
Figure 6
Effect of different flow rates on the pressure and the
experimental
apparatus diagram. (I) Forward pressure at different flows. (II) Reverse
pressure at different flows. (III) Di at
different flow rates and configurations. (IV) Experimental setup.
Unidirectional flow test procedure.Effect of different flow rates on the pressure and the
experimental
apparatus diagram. (I) Forward pressure at different flows. (II) Reverse
pressure at different flows. (III) Di at
different flow rates and configurations. (IV) Experimental setup.Di represents the pressure
ratio, ΔPr is the pressure generated
by the channel in
reverse flow, and ΔPf is the pressure
generated by the channel in forward flow. The larger the Di is, the more difficult the reverse flow is than the
forward flow, and the more obvious the effect of one-way flow is.
The pressure ratio increases with the increase of the groove structure.
This is because the circular channel and the horizontal channel of
the groove structure have large geometric mutations. When the fluid
flows in the reverse direction to the groove position, the resistance
is increased, so the reverse pressure is much greater than the forward
pressure. At the same time, the increase of the number of grooves
will have a superposition effect on the increase of the pressure ratio.
Finally, the pressure ratio of the 3-AAC Tesla valve structure is
the maximum, which is 2.75, and the one-way flow of the device is
the best. Figure IV
is the experimental device diagram, which consists of a water faucet,
a flow gauge, a Tesla valve structure mold, a water pipe, and connectors.
The experiment is verified by controlling the flow rate and measuring
the pressure at the inlet and outlet and calculating the pressure
ratio. The experiment of Figure is to put the micromixer inside the rubber tube, measure
the pressure expression, and calculate the Di value by controlling the flow rate. The parameters of the
rubber tube and the micromixer are given in the text.Micromixer
parameters are as follows: length 70 μm, width
15 μm, and height 10 μm.Rubber tube parameters
are as follows: inner diameter 5 mm; outer
diameter 7 mm; fixed on the flow meter and pressure gauge through
a circular distributor and adapter.
Effect of Different Grooves on Mixing Efficiency
Figure demonstrates
the mixing efficiency curves of micromixers with the Tesla valve structure
and three different groove numbers. 1, 2, 3, and 4 are the measurement
positions of the corresponding 3D schematic diagram of the three structures’
mixing efficiency. Figure I shows the mixing efficiency of the 4-AAC Tesla valve micromixer
at different positions. With the increase of flow time, the mixing
efficiency increases from 0.55 to 0.78. The longer the fluid stays
in the microchannel, the higher the mixing efficiency. Figure II,III shows the mixing efficiency
of 5-AAC and 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixers at different positions.
It shows that the mixing efficiency increases with the increase in
the number of grooves. This is because when the fluid passes through
the groove of the micromixer, part of the shunt will leave the original
flow direction and flow to the direction of the protruding object
surface. The typical flow characteristic of microfluidics is laminar
flow. The fluid layers are in contact with each other and do not react.
At this time, the free diffusion between fluid molecules is the dominant
factor of mixing. Equation shows the diffusion time t of molecules
is proportional to the square of the diffusion distance d2 and inversely proportional to the diffusion coefficient D of the medium, that is to say, reducing the diffusion
distance d between molecules and increasing the diffusion
coefficient D of the fluid are both the same. It
is beneficial to improve the efficiency of microfluidic flow. At the
same time, the increase of the flow rate destroys the immiscible equilibrium
flow state between the fluid layers during the microfluidic flow process.
The splitting and reorganization are improved, thereby improving the
mixing efficiency. Figure IV shows the trend comparison of mixing efficiency of three
structures. Figure IV shows the channel parameter comparison of the micromixer. Obviously,
when the micromixer height is 5 mm, the channel width is 200 μm,
and the cross-sectional area is 40,000 μm2, the 6-AAC
Tesla valve micromixer has the highest mixing efficiency of 0.88.where d is the diffusion
distance and D is the diffusion coefficient.
Figure 7
Effect of different
grooves on the mixing efficiency. (I) Mixing
efficiency of the 4-AAC Tesla valve micromixer at different positions.
(II) Mixing efficiency of the 5-AAC Tesla valve micromixer at different
positions. (III) Mixing efficiency of the 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixer
at different positions. (IV) Mixing efficiency of the 4-, 5-, and
6-AAC Tesla valve micromixers at different positions.
Effect of different
grooves on the mixing efficiency. (I) Mixing
efficiency of the 4-AAC Tesla valve micromixer at different positions.
(II) Mixing efficiency of the 5-AAC Tesla valve micromixer at different
positions. (III) Mixing efficiency of the 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixer
at different positions. (IV) Mixing efficiency of the 4-, 5-, and
6-AAC Tesla valve micromixers at different positions.
Effect of Different Flow Rates on Mixing Efficiency
Figure shows the
mixing efficiency curves of micromixers with the Tesla valve structure
under different flow rates with three different groove numbers. Figure I–IV shows
the micromixer in 0.5, 1, 0.5, and 2 mL/min in different grooves for
the Tesla valve structure of the micromixer mixing efficiency. With
the increase of flow velocity, the pressure of the fluid in the channel
increases, the intermolecular force of the fluid is accelerated, and
the mixing efficiency is improved. Figure V shows the comparison diagram of the mixing
efficiency trend of micromixers with four types of groove Tesla valve
structure at four flow rates. Figure VI shows the local physical measurement diagram under
the microscope. As can be seen from the figure, with the increase
of flow rate, the mixing efficiency of the micromixer is improved.
Finally, the 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixer can achieve the maximum
mixing efficiency of 0.891 at 2.0 mL/min.
Figure 8
Effect of different flow
rates on the mixing efficiency. (I) Micromixer
at 0.5 mL/min mixing efficiency. (II) Micromixer at 1 mL/min mixing
efficiency. (III) Micromixer at 1.5 mL/min mixing efficiency. (IV)
Micromixer at 2 mL/min mixing efficiency. (V) Mixing efficiency of
the micromixer at different flow rates. (VI) Mixing effect diagram
of the micromixer. (a–d) are the mixing efficiencies of the
Tesla valve micromixer at different positions.
Effect of different flow
rates on the mixing efficiency. (I) Micromixer
at 0.5 mL/min mixing efficiency. (II) Micromixer at 1 mL/min mixing
efficiency. (III) Micromixer at 1.5 mL/min mixing efficiency. (IV)
Micromixer at 2 mL/min mixing efficiency. (V) Mixing efficiency of
the micromixer at different flow rates. (VI) Mixing effect diagram
of the micromixer. (a–d) are the mixing efficiencies of the
Tesla valve micromixer at different positions.
Effect of Deformation Conditions
Figure illustrates
the mixing efficiency of the micromixer with the Tesla valve structure
under different deformation conditions. Figure I shows the mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under tensile condition. With the increase of the tensile length,
the mixing efficiency decreases. Since the cross-sectional area of
the channel becomes smaller under the stretching condition of the
micromixer, the contact area between the fluids becomes smaller, and
the flow rate of the microfluidic fluid per unit time decreases. Therefore,
the complementary reaction between the microfluidic layers is reduced.
At this time, the fluid molecules cannot generate a great slip in
a large range, the collision frequency between the molecules is low,
and the mixing efficiency is reduced. Figure II shows the mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under compression condition. When the Tesla valve micromixer is in
the compression state, the mixing efficiency will be reduced due to
the bending deformation of the microchannel during compression. It
is also damaged, resulting in a great change in the microfluidic flow
rate and force at the groove, and the collision frequency between
the fluid molecules and the solid wall at the groove is low. It can
be seen from eq that
when the flow rate and width of the microchannel decrease, Pe decreases,
the proportion of convection generated between the fluid molecules
decreases, and the mixing efficiency decreases. Figure III is a comparison of the mixing efficiency
between drawing and compressing in a micromixer at a flow rate of
0.5–2 mL/min. Figure IV is the experimental setup. Finally, the mixing efficiency
of the micromixer is 0.825 when the flow rate is 2 mL/min and the
drawing length is 5 mm.
Figure 9
Mixing efficiency of the Tesla valve structure
micromixer under
different deformation conditions. (I) Mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under tensile condition. (II) Mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under compression condition. (III) Mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under tensile condition and compression condition. (IV) Experimental
setup.
Mixing efficiency of the Tesla valve structure
micromixer under
different deformation conditions. (I) Mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under tensile condition. (II) Mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under compression condition. (III) Mixing efficiency of the micromixer
under tensile condition and compression condition. (IV) Experimental
setup.Among them, Pe is the relative ratio of convection
and diffusion, v is the velocity, w is the width of the
channel, and D is the intermolecular diffusion coefficient.
Real Application
The current micromixer
can be widely used in chemical synthesis, cell separation, biopharmaceutical,
and other fields. D. J. Kim designed a micromixer similar to crocodile
teeth. This micromixer can monitor the ability of glucose–enzyme
reaction by adding a triangular structure in a rectangular channel
and finally forming a micromixer with a zigzag microchannel. Fluorescence
detection was performed by microscopy by introducing glucose and AmplexRed
in both inlets. In contrast, the Tesla valve micromixer has smaller
size and microchannels and is simple to manufacture, which is more
conducive to the mixing of glucose and enzymes and can better complete
the spectroscopic experiments of the glucose catalyst reaction. In
addition, the Tesla valve micromixer can also test the acidity and
alkalinity of chemical reagents, such as purple litmus reagent and
white vinegar, colorless phenolphthalein reagent and lime water, and
so forth. Figure shows the effect of purple litmus reagent and white vinegar in Tesla.
In the mixing experiment under the valve micromixer, it can be seen
that the litmus reagent and white vinegar are finally mixed to form
a red solution, which proves that white vinegar is acidic. After processing
the gray value and calculating the mixing efficiency, it can be seen
that with the increase of mixing time, the mixing efficiency gradually
increases, and the mixing efficiency is the highest at the time of
Location 6, which is 0.893. At the same time, after fitting, R2 is 0.986, which proves that the mixing efficiency
increases linearly.
Figure 10
Mixing experiment of the reaction between the purple litmus
reagent
and white vinegar.
Mixing experiment of the reaction between the purple litmus
reagent
and white vinegar.
Comparison of Tables
As the micromixer
structure becomes more diverse,[6,15] this article lists
and compares four micromixers, such as Table . Although the H-shaped subchannel micromixer
is simple to manufacture,[13] the mixing
efficiency is low. Nd3 double layer structure micromixer improves
the mixing efficiency by the micro-vortex mixing principle.[12] However, due to the special microchannel of
the double-layer structure, the micromixer needs to be prepared by
bonding, and the processing time is too long and the processing is
cumbersome.[22] The three-dimensional fabrication
of the spiral channel made by polymer dissolution technology is relatively
simple and low cost. Nevertheless, the micromixers do not have unidirectional
flow. The peristaltic micromixer has the characteristics of unidirectional
flow through the piezoelectric driving method. However, when the fluid
inside the micromixer is exposed to the electric field, the transportation
mode of the internal fluid is likely to change the chemical properties
of the reagent itself, thus affecting the experimental results. In
this paper, a new passive micromixer with the Tesla valve structure
is proposed, which not only has a simple manufacturing method and
is of low cost but also has a high mixing efficiency and unidirectional
flow characteristics.
Table 6
Comparison of Different Characteristics
of Micromixers
microchannel structure
flow mode
mixing
efficiency
production
unidirectional liquidity
driving mode
Tesla valve
laminar flow
0.887
30 min
yes
passive
H-shaped subchannels
laminar flow
0.65
2 h
no
passive
spiral channel
turbulence
0.948
30 min
no
passive
Nd3 double layer structure
turbulence
0.94
5 h
no
passive
peristaltic
Micromixer
turbulence
0.98
over 24 h
yes
piezoelectric drive
Conclusions
This paper introduces a
micromixer with Tesla valve structure and
its preparation method. The mixer has the advantages of one-way flowability
and high mixing efficiency.A: The mixing efficiency of the
T-shaped straight channel is 0.7
and that of Tesla valve is 0.865 at the same flow rate compared with
that of T-shaped straight channel with the same length and cross-sectional
area under different Re. Mixing efficiency increased
by 0.165. Therefore, the Tesla valve configuration can increase the
mixing efficiency compared to the planar configuration. Mixing efficiency
increased by 0.165. So, the Tesla Valve configuration can increase
the mixing efficiency compared to the planar configuration.B: The structure of the Tesla valve is characterized by one-way
flow. With the increase of the groove structure, the ratio Di of the forward pressure to the reverse pressure
increases. Finally, the Di values of 1.82,
2.5, and 2.9 were obtained when the flow velocity was 6 L/min. In
addition, it can be concluded that the increase of the groove structure
can increase the unidirectional flowability of the micromixer.C: Tesla valve construction improves the mixing efficiency. Under
the same cross-sectional area, the mixing efficiency of 4-AAC Tesla
valve is 0.795 by increasing the groove structure. The mixing efficiency
of the 5-groove Tesla valve structure is 0.86. The mixing efficiency
of the 6-AAC Tesla valve structure is 0.88. The cross-sectional area
of the channel is the same, and the mixing efficiency of the Tesla
valve can be improved by increasing the number of grooves.D:
The mixing efficiency of the micromixer with different flow
rates is tested under the same structure, and the mixing efficiency
increases with the increase of flow rate. The results show that the
maximum mixing efficiency is 0.887 under the condition of 2.0 mL/min.E: It is concluded that the mixing efficiency of the micromixer
is reduced under the deformation condition. When the stretch and compression
length are the same, the mixing efficiency of the micromixer under
the stretch condition is higher than that under the compression condition.
The mixing efficiency decreases with the increase of the stretching
and compression length. The results show that the mixing efficiency
is 0.84 when the flow rate is 2.0 mL/min and the stretch length is
5 mm.To sum up, the micromixer presented in this paper can
effectively
improve the mixing efficiency compared with the conventional plane
structure. Finally, the 6-AAC Tesla valve micromixer has the best
mixing performance when the flow rate is 2.0 mL/min.