Direct measurement of microscale flow structures induced by inertial focusing of single particle and particle trains in a confined microchannel

2018 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 102005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenhai Pan ◽  
Runlin Zhang ◽  
Chen Yuan ◽  
Huiying Wu
Soft Matter ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 2379-2386 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent Helden ◽  
Ralf Eichhorn ◽  
Clemens Bechinger

Thermophoretic forces acting on spherical colloidal particles in confinement are obtained from single particle measurements. This allows to characterize so far inaccessible particle sizes and materials.


2011 ◽  
Vol 107 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Ulmer ◽  
K. Blaum ◽  
H. Kracke ◽  
A. Mooser ◽  
W. Quint ◽  
...  

Lab on a Chip ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (15) ◽  
pp. 2840-2850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kaitlyn Hood ◽  
Soroush Kahkeshani ◽  
Dino Di Carlo ◽  
Marcus Roper

We experimentally measured the trajectories of particles undergoing microfluidic inertial focusing, and show that they can be predicted by an asymptotic theory with no unmeasured parameters.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. J. Wei ◽  
Y. K. Joshi ◽  
P. M. Ligrani

Steady, laminar flow and heat transfer, inside a rectangular microchannel with a dimpled bottom surface, are numerically studied. The microchannel is 50×10−6m(50μm) deep and 200×10−6m(200μm) wide. The dimples are placed in a single row along the bottom wall with a pitch of 150×10−6m(150μm). The dimple depth is 20×10−6m(20μm), and the dimple footprint diameter is 98×10−6m(98μm). Fully developed periodic velocity and temperature boundary conditions are used at the inlet and outlet of one unit cell of the dimpled microchannel. Key flow structures such as recirculating flow and secondary flow patterns and their development along the flow directions are identified. The impact of these flow structures on the heat transfer is described. Heat transfer augmentations (relative to a channel with smooth walls) are present both on the bottom-dimpled surface, and on the sidewalls of the channel. The pressure drops in the laminar-microscale flow are either equivalent to, or less than, values produced in smooth channels with no dimples. It is concluded that dimples, proven to be an effective passive heat transfer augmentation for macroscale channels, can also be used to enhance heat transfer inside microchannels.


2018 ◽  
Vol 230 ◽  
pp. 152-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Song ◽  
Joris Everaerts ◽  
Wei Zhai ◽  
Han Zheng ◽  
Adrian Wei Yee Tan ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
J. Frank ◽  
P.-Y. Sizaret ◽  
A. Verschoor ◽  
J. Lamy

The accuracy with which the attachment site of immunolabels bound to macromolecules may be localized in electron microscopic images can be considerably improved by using single particle averaging. The example studied in this work showed that the accuracy may be better than the resolution limit imposed by negative staining (∽2nm).The structure used for this demonstration was a halfmolecule of Limulus polyphemus (LP) hemocyanin, consisting of 24 subunits grouped into four hexamers. The top view of this structure was previously studied by image averaging and correspondence analysis. It was found to vary according to the flip or flop position of the molecule, and to the stain imbalance between diagonally opposed hexamers (“rocking effect”). These findings have recently been incorporated into a model of the full 8 × 6 molecule.LP hemocyanin contains eight different polypeptides, and antibodies specific for one, LP II, were used. Uranyl acetate was used as stain. A total of 58 molecule images (29 unlabelled, 29 labelled with antl-LPII Fab) showing the top view were digitized in the microdensitometer with a sampling distance of 50μ corresponding to 6.25nm.


Author(s):  
Adriana Verschoor ◽  
Ronald Milligan ◽  
Suman Srivastava ◽  
Joachim Frank

We have studied the eukaryotic ribosome from two vertebrate species (rabbit reticulocyte and chick embryo ribosomes) in several different electron microscopic preparations (Fig. 1a-d), and we have applied image processing methods to two of the types of images. Reticulocyte ribosomes were examined in both negative stain (0.5% uranyl acetate, in a double-carbon preparation) and frozen hydrated preparation as single-particle specimens. In addition, chick embryo ribosomes in tetrameric and crystalline assemblies in frozen hydrated preparation have been examined. 2D averaging, multivariate statistical analysis, and classification methods have been applied to the negatively stained single-particle micrographs and the frozen hydrated tetramer micrographs to obtain statistically well defined projection images of the ribosome (Fig. 2a,c). 3D reconstruction methods, the random conical reconstruction scheme and weighted back projection, were applied to the negative-stain data, and several closely related reconstructions were obtained. The principal 3D reconstruction (Fig. 2b), which has a resolution of 3.7 nm according to the differential phase residual criterion, can be compared to the images of individual ribosomes in a 2D tetramer average (Fig. 2c) at a similar resolution, and a good agreement of the general morphology and of many of the characteristic features is seen.Both data sets show the ribosome in roughly the same ’view’ or orientation, with respect to the adsorptive surface in the electron microscopic preparation, as judged by the agreement in both the projected form and the distribution of characteristic density features. The negative-stain reconstruction reveals details of the ribosome morphology; the 2D frozen-hydrated average provides projection information on the native mass-density distribution within the structure. The 40S subunit appears to have an elongate core of higher density, while the 60S subunit shows a more complex pattern of dense features, comprising a rather globular core, locally extending close to the particle surface.


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