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Electrokinetic biased deterministic lateral displacement: scaling analysis and simulations.

Authors :
Calero, Victor
García-Sánchez, Pablo
Ramos, Antonio
Morgan, Hywel
Source :
Journal of Chromatography A. Jul2020, Vol. 1623, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

• Electrokinetics tunes Deterministic Lateral Displacement particle separation. • Scaling laws of AC electrokinetic particle separation in DLD devices were identified. • Simulations are in excellent agreement with the experimental data at high frequencies. • New insights on the particle low frequency AC electrokinetic behaviour are provided. Deterministic Lateral Displacement (DLD) is a microfluidic technique where arrays of micropillars within a microchannel deflect particles leading to size-based segregation. We recently demonstrated that applying AC electric fields orthogonal to the fluid flow increases the separation capabilities of these devices with a deflection angle that depends on the electric field magnitude and frequency. Particle deviation occurs in two distinct regimes depending on frequency. At high frequencies particles deviate due to negative dielectrophoresis (DEP). At low frequencies (below 1 kHz) particles oscillate perpendicular to the flow direction due to electrophoresis and are also deflected within the device. Significantly, the threshold electric field magnitude for the low frequency deviation is much lower than for deflection at high frequencies by DEP. In order to characterize the enhanced separation at low frequencies, the induced deviation was compared between the two frequency ranges. For high frequencies, we develop both theoretically and experimentally scaling laws for the dependence of particle deviation on several parameters, namely the amplitude of the applied voltage, particle size and liquid velocity where DEP forces compete with viscous drag. A novel theoretical framework is presented that enables simulation of particle trajectories subjected to DEP forces in DLD devices. Deviation angles predicted by simulations are in very good agreement with experimental data. At low frequencies (below 1 kHz), particles follow the same scaling law, but with much lower voltages. This indicates that electrokinetic phenomena other than DEP play an important role in driving particle behaviour. Experiments show that at low frequencies, particle motion is affected by quadrupolar electrohydrodynamic flows around the insulating pillars of the DLD array. We quantify the difference between the two frequency regimes and show that an electrokinetic model based only on DEP forces is limited to frequencies of 1 kHz and above. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219673
Volume :
1623
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Chromatography A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
143575923
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2020.461151