×

Inertial focusing of spherical particles in curved microfluidic ducts at moderate Dean numbers. (English) Zbl 1527.76078

Summary: We examine the effect of Dean number on the inertial focusing of spherical particles suspended in flow through curved microfluidic ducts. Previous modelling of particle migration in curved ducts assumed the flow rate was small enough that a leading-order approximation of the background flow with respect to the Dean number produces a reasonable model. Herein, we extend our model to situations involving a moderate Dean number (in the microfluidics context) while the particle Reynolds number remains small. Variations in the Dean number cause a change in the axial velocity profile of the background flow which influences the inertial lift force on a particle. Simultaneously, changes in the cross-sectional velocity components of the background flow directly affect the secondary flow induced drag. In keeping the particle Reynolds number small, we continue to approximate the inertial lift force using a regular perturbation while capturing the subtle effects from the modified background flow. This approach pushes the limits at which a regular perturbation is applicable to provide some insights into how variations in the Dean number influence particle focusing. Our results illustrate that, as the extrema in the background flow move towards the outside of edge of the cross-section with increasing Dean number, we observe a similar shift in the stable equilibria of some, but not all, particle sizes. This might be exploited to enhance the lateral separation of particles by size in a number of practical scenarios.

MSC:

76T20 Suspensions
76M45 Asymptotic methods, singular perturbations applied to problems in fluid mechanics

Software:

FEniCS; GitHub

References:

[1] Alnaes, M.S., Blechta, J., Hake, J., Johansson, A., Kehlet, B., Logg, A., Richardson, C., Ring, J., Rognes, M.E. & Wells, G.N.2015 The FEniCS project version 1.5. Archive of numerical Software 3.
[2] Asmolov, E.S.1999The inertial lift on a spherical particle in a plane poiseuille flow at large channel Reynolds number. J. Fluid Mech.381, 63-87. · Zbl 0935.76025
[3] Ault, J.T., Rallabandi, B., Shardt, O., Chen, K.K. & Stone, H.A.2017Entry and exit flows in curved pipes. J. Fluid Mech.815, 570-591. · Zbl 1383.76075
[4] Bhagat, A.A.S., Kuntaegowdanahalli, S.S. & Papautsky, I.2008Continuous particle separation in spiral microchannels using dean flows and differential migration. Lab on a Chip8, 1906-1914.
[5] Dean, W.R.1927Note on the motion of fluid in a curved pipe. Lond. Edinb. Dublin Philos. Mag. J. Sci.4 (20), 208-223. · JFM 54.0909.05
[6] Dean, W.R. & Hurst, J.M.1959Note on the motion of fluid in a curved pipe. Mathematika6 (1), 77-85. · Zbl 0094.39703
[7] Di Carlo, D.2009Inertial microfluidics. Lab on a Chip9, 3038-3046.
[8] Di Carlo, D., Edd, J.F., Humphry, K.J., Stone, H.A. & Toner, M.2009Particle segregation and dynamics in confined flows. Phys. Rev. Lett.102, 094503.
[9] Gossett, D.R. & Di Carlo, D.2009Particle focusing mechanisms in curving confined flows. Anal. Chem.81 (20), 8459-8465.
[10] Ha, K., Harding, B., Bertozzi, A.L. & Stokes, Y.M.2022Dynamics of small particle inertial migration in curved square ducts. SIAM Dyn. Syst. (accepted). · Zbl 1486.76098
[11] Harding, B.2019a Convergence analysis of inertial lift force estimates using the finite element method. In Proceedings of the 18th Biennial Computational Techniques and Applications Conference (ed. B. Lamichhane, T. Tran & J. Bunder), ANZIAM J., vol. 60, pp. C65-C78.
[12] Harding, B.2019b Curved duct flow Python class. GitHub: https://github.com/brendanharding/CDFC.
[13] Harding, B.2019c Inertial lift force helper Python class. GitHub: https://github.com/brendanharding/ILFHC.
[14] Harding, B.2019dA Rayleigh-Ritz method for Navier-Stokes flow through curved ducts. ANZIAM J.61, 1-22. · Zbl 1409.65070
[15] Harding, B. & Stokes, Y.M.2020Inertial focusing of non-neutrally buoyant spherical particles in curved microfluidic ducts. J. Fluid Mech.902, 1-29. · Zbl 1460.76837
[16] Harding, B., Stokes, Y.M. & Bertozzi, A.L.2019Effect of inertial lift on a spherical particle suspended in flow through a curved duct. J. Fluid Mech.875, 1-43. · Zbl 1419.76129
[17] Ho, B.P. & Leal, L.G.1974Inertial migration of rigid spheres in two-dimensional unidirectional flows. J. Fluid Mech.65 (2), 365-400. · Zbl 0284.76076
[18] Hogg, A.J.1994The inertial migration of non-neutrally buoyant spherical particles in two-dimensional shear flows. J. Fluid Mech.272, 285-318. · Zbl 0823.76086
[19] Hood, K., Lee, S. & Roper, M.2015Inertial migration of a rigid sphere in three-dimensional poiseuille flow. J. Fluid Mech.765, 452-479. · Zbl 1331.76039
[20] Hood, K.T.2016 Theory of particle focusing in inertial microfluidic devices. PhD thesis, University of California, Los Angeles.
[21] Logg, A., Mardal, K.-A. & Wells, G.N., ed. 2012Automated Solution of Differential Equations by the Finite Element Method. Lecture Notes in Computational Science and Engineering, vol. 84. Springer. · Zbl 1247.65105
[22] Martel, J.M. & Toner, M.2012Inertial focusing dynamics in spiral microchannels. Phys. Fluids24 (3), 032001.
[23] Martel, J.M. & Toner, M.2013Particle focusing in curved microfluidic channels. Sci. Rep.3, 3340.
[24] Martel, J.M. & Toner, M.2014Inertial focusing in microfluidics. Annu. Rev. Biomed. Engng16 (1), 371-396.
[25] Matas, J.-P., Morris, J.F. & Guazelli, É.2004Inertial migration of rigid spherical particles in Poiseuille flow. J. Fluid Mech.515, 171-195. · Zbl 1130.76301
[26] Matas, J.-P., Morris, J.F. & Guazelli, É.2009Lateral force on a rigid sphere in large-inertia laminar pipe flow. J. Fluid Mech.621, 59-67. · Zbl 1171.76348
[27] Rafeie, M., Hosseinzadeh, S., Taylor, R.A. & Warkiani, M.E.2019New insights into the physics of inertial microfluidics in curved microchannels. I. Relaxing the fixed inflection point assumption. Biomicrofluidics13 (3), 034117.
[28] Saffman, P.G.1965The lift on a small sphere in a slow shear flow. J. Fluid Mech.22 (2), 385-400. · Zbl 0218.76043
[29] Schonberg, J.A. & Hinch, E.J.1989Inertial migration of a sphere in poiseuille flow. J. Fluid Mech.203, 517-524. · Zbl 0675.76038
[30] Seo, J., Lean, M.H. & Kole, A.2007Membraneless microseparation by asymmetry in curvilinear laminar flows. J. Chromatogr. A1162 (2), 126-131.
[31] Valani, R.N., Harding, B. & Stokes, Y.M.2022Bifurcations and dynamics of particles in inertial focusing in curved ducts with rectangular cross-section. SIAM Dyn. Syst. (in review). · Zbl 1503.76041
[32] Warkiani, M.E., et al.2014Slanted spiral microfluidics for the ultra-fast, label-free isolation of circulating tumor cells. Lab on a Chip14, 128-137.
[33] Warkiani, M.E., Khoo, B.L., Wu, L., Tay, A.K.P., Bhagat, A.A.S., Han, J. & Lim, C.T.2016Ultra-fast, label-free isolation of circulating tumor cells from blood using spiral microfluidics. Nat. Protoc.11 (1), 134-148.
[34] Winters, K.H.1987A bifurcation study of laminar flow in a curved tube of rectangular cross-section. J. Fluid Mech.180, 343-369. · Zbl 0632.76032
This reference list is based on information provided by the publisher or from digital mathematics libraries. Its items are heuristically matched to zbMATH identifiers and may contain data conversion errors. In some cases that data have been complemented/enhanced by data from zbMATH Open. This attempts to reflect the references listed in the original paper as accurately as possible without claiming completeness or a perfect matching.