A full-scale computational study on the electrodynamics of a rigid particle in an optically induced dielectrophoresis chip

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (22) ◽  
pp. 2050233
Author(s):  
Liuyong Shi ◽  
Xiaoming Shi ◽  
Teng Zhou ◽  
Zhenyu Liu ◽  
Zhiyuan Liu ◽  
...  

A transient continuum model of the ODEP chip containing single circular particle inside is constructed based on multi-physical field coupling. The dielectrophoresis force and liquid viscous resistance acting on particle are calculated by employing the full Maxwell stress tensor. The coupled flow field, electric field and particle are solved by the arbitrary Lagrange–Euler (ALE) method simultaneously. The throughout dynamic process of particle in the ODEP chip is demonstrated, and the effect of several critical parameters on particle electrodynamics is illuminated. The additional disturbing effect of the photoconductive layer on the electric field as well as the micro-channel wall on the flow field is presented to clarify the particle motion in the vertical direction. The results in this study provide a detailed understanding of the particle dynamics in the ODEP chip.

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunzhen Ye ◽  
Dongqing Li

This paper considers the electrophoretic motion of a circular particle in a T-shaped slit microchannel, where the size of the channel is close to that of the particle. During the process, the electric field (i.e., the gradient of the electric potential) changes with the particle motion, which in return influences the flow field and the particle motion. Therefore, the electric field, the flow field and the particle motion are coupled together, and this is an unsteady process. The objective is to obtain a fundamental understanding of the characteristics of the particle motion in the complicated T-shaped junction region. Such influences on the electric field and the particle motion are investigated as the applied electric potentials, the geometry of the channel and the size of the particle. In the theoretical analysis, the liquid phase is divided into the inner region and the outer region. The inner region consists of the electrical double layers and the outer region consists of the remainder of the liquid. Under the assumption of thin electrical double layer, a mathematical model governing the inner region, the outer region and the particle motion is developed. A direct numerical simulation method using the finite element method is employed. In this method, a continuous hydrodynamic model is adopted. By this model, both the liquid phase in the outer region and the particle phase are governed by the same momentum equations. ALE method is used to track the surface of the particle at each time step. The numerical results show that the electric field is influenced by the applied electric potentials, the geometry of the channel and the particle suspension, and that the particle motion is mainly dominated by the local electric field. It is also found that the magnitude of the particle motion is dependent on its own size in the same channel.


Author(s):  
Y. F. Yap ◽  
J. C. Chai ◽  
T. N. Wong ◽  
N. T. Nguyen ◽  
K. C. Toh ◽  
...  

Electrophoresis is the motion of a charged particle relative to the surrounding liquid due to an imposed external electric field1. Its applications include but are not limited to characterization and manipulation of organic and inorganic particles. In particular, electrophoresis has been applied to a variety of analytical separation problems involving nucleic acids, proteins and drugs. For electrophoresis on various Lab-on-a-chip platforms, the particles are of sizes comparable to the microchannel in which they flow. As such, particle-particle and particle-wall interactions are no longer negligible. Therefore, the electric field, the flow field and the particles motion are strongly coupled together. Numerical models based on a moving-grid method2 have been employed to investigate the related phenomena. Mesh regeneration as the particles move is an extra computational complication. To circumvent the complexity of mesh regeneration, a level-set based fixed-grid method3 is presented for electrophoretic motion of particles in this article. The particles are assumed to be a highly viscous liquid constraint to move with rigid body motion. A distance function is employed to represent the liquid-particle interfaces. The electric field, the flow field and the particles motion are governed respectively by the Poisson, the Navier-Stokes and the Euler-Newton equations. The effect of the electric field on the particle motion is accounted for by incorporating slip boundary conditions on the particles surfaces. The nonlinear governing equations are discretized and solved using a finite volume method4. The model is used to investigate electrophoretic motion of non-conducting circular and elliptical particles in a microsystem. Figure 1 shows the electrophoretic motion of a single circular particle in a microchannel. The induced electroosmotic flow is from the left to the right. The thick circles are the particle at t = 0. The direction of the particle movement is indicated by the arrows. The motions of the particle if neutral, positively or negatively charged are obviously different. Basically, a positively charged particle move faster than the main flow. However, a negatively charged particle flows slower. When the particle is highly charged negative, it can even flow against the streamwise direction toward upstream (+V) as in Fig. 1c. This suggests that there would be a situation where the particle can be kept static. Figure 2 shows the electrophoretic motion of multiple particles. The initial locations of the particles are shown in Fig. 2a. In the case of charged particles, particle 1, 2 and 3 are respectively negatively, neutral and positively charged. Particle 1 which is elliptical undergoes obvious rotational motion when charged (Fig. 2c). The case of the neutral particles (Fig. 2b) is included for comparison.


2021 ◽  
Vol 151 ◽  
pp. 106816
Author(s):  
Thi-Nga Do ◽  
Vo T.T. Vi ◽  
Nguyen T.T. Binh ◽  
Nguyen N. Hieu ◽  
Nguyen V. Hieu

2021 ◽  
Vol 87 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Swati Baruah ◽  
U. Sarma ◽  
R. Ganesh

Lane formation dynamics in externally driven pair-ion plasma (PIP) particles is studied in the presence of external magnetic field using Langevin dynamics (LD) simulation. The phase diagram obtained distinguishing the no-lane and lane states is systematically determined from a study of various Coulomb coupling parameter values. A peculiar lane formation-disintegration parameter space is identified; lane formation area extended to a wide range of Coulomb coupling parameter values is observed before disappearing to a mixed phase. The different phases are identified by calculating the order parameter. This and the critical parameters are calculated directly from LD simulation. The critical electric field strength value above which the lanes are formed distinctly is obtained, and it is observed that in the presence of the external magnetic field, the PIP system requires a higher value of the electric field strength to enter into the lane formation state than that in the absence of the magnetic field. We further find out the critical value of electric field frequency beyond which the system exhibits a transition back to the disordered state and this critical frequency is found as an increasing function of the electric field strength in the presence of an external magnetic field. The movement of the lanes is also observed in a direction perpendicular to that of the applied electric and magnetic field directions, which reveals the existence of the electric field drift in the system under study. We also use an oblique force field as the external driving force, both in the presence and absence of the external magnetic field. The application of this oblique force changes the orientation of the lane structures for different applied oblique angle values.


1984 ◽  
Vol 53 (5) ◽  
pp. 469-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Kapitulnik ◽  
S. Casalnuovo ◽  
K. C. Lim ◽  
A. J. Heeger

Author(s):  
Alessandro Armellini ◽  
Filippo Coletti ◽  
Tony Arts ◽  
Christophe Scholtes

The present contribution addresses the aero-thermal experimental and computational study of a trapezoidal cross-section model simulating a trailing edge cooling cavity with one rib-roughened wall. The flow is fed through tilted slots on one side wall and exits through straight slots on the opposite side wall. The flow field aerodynamics is investigated in part I of the paper. The reference Reynolds number is defined at the entrance of the test section and set at 67500 for all the experiments. A qualitative flow model is deduced from surface-streamline flow visualizations. Two-dimensional Particle Image Velocimetry measurements are performed in several planes around mid-span of the channel and recombined to visualize and quantify three-dimensional flow features. The jets issued from the tilted slots are characterized and the jet-rib interaction is analyzed. Attention is drawn to the motion of the flow deflected by the rib-roughened wall and impinging on the opposite smooth wall. The experimental results are compared with the numerical predictions obtained from the finite volume, RANS solver CEDRE.


2001 ◽  
Vol 124 (1) ◽  
pp. 154-165 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. R. Maddah ◽  
H. H. Bruun

This paper presents results obtained from a combined experimental and computational study of the flow field over a multi-element aerofoil with and without an advanced slat. Detailed measurements of the mean flow and turbulent quantities over a multi-element aerofoil model in a wind tunnel have been carried out using stationary and flying hot-wire (FHW) probes. The model configuration which spans the test section 600mm×600mm, is made of three parts: 1) an advanced (heel-less) slat, 2) a NACA 4412 main aerofoil and 3) a NACA 4415 flap. The chord lengths of the elements were 38, 250 and 83 mm, respectively. The results were obtained at a chord Reynolds number of 3×105 and a free Mach number of less than 0.1. The variations in the flow field are explained with reference to three distinct flow field regimes: attached flow, intermittent separated flow, and separated flow. Initial comparative results are presented for the single main aerofoil and the main aerofoil with a nondeflected flap at angles of attacks of 5, 10, and 15 deg. This is followed by the results for the three-element aerofoil with emphasis on the slat performance at angles of attack α=10, 15, 20, and 25 deg. Results are discussed both for a nondeflected flap δf=0deg and a deflected flap δf=25deg. The measurements presented are combined with other related aerofoil measurements to explain the main interaction of the slat/main aerofoil and main aerofoil/flap both for nondeflected and deflected flap conditions. These results are linked to numerically calculated variations in lift and drag coefficients with angle of attack and flap deflection angle.


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