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Elasto-inertial microfluidic separation of microspheres with submicron resolution at high-throughput

Engineering and Technology

Elasto-inertial microfluidic separation of microspheres with submicron resolution at high-throughput

H. Jeon, S. H. Lee, et al.

This innovative research by Hyunwoo Jeon, Song Ha Lee, Jongho Shin, Kicheol Song, Nari Ahn, and Jinsoo Park delves into a dimensionless analysis for the precise estimation of microsphere behaviors in elasto-inertial microfluidic separation. Discover how new dimensionless numbers can enhance microsphere migration predictions and achieve impressive separation results.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Elasto-inertial microfluidic separation offers many advantages including high throughput and separation resolution. Even though the separation efficiency highly depends on precise control of the flow conditions, no concrete guidelines have been reported yet in elasto-inertial microfluidics. Here, we propose a dimensionless analysis for precise estimation of the microsphere behaviors across the interface of Newtonian and viscoelastic fluids. Reynolds number, modified Weissenberg number, and modified elastic number are used to investigate the balance between inertial and elastic lift forces. Based on the findings, we introduce a new dimensionless number defined as the width of the Newtonian fluid stream divided by microsphere diameter. The proposed dimensionless analysis allows us to predict whether the microspheres migrate across the co-flow interface. The theoretical estimation is found to be in good agreement with the experimental results using 2.1 and 3.2-um-diameter polystyrene microspheres in a co-flow of water and polyethylene oxide solution. Based on the theoretical estimation, we also realize submicron separation of the microspheres with 2.1 and 2.5 µm in diameter at high throughput, high purity (>95%), and high recovery rate (>97%). The applicability of the proposed method was validated by separation of platelets from similar-sized Escherichia coli (E.coli).
Publisher
Microsystems & Nanoengineering
Published On
Jan 01, 2024
Authors
Hyunwoo Jeon, Song Ha Lee, Jongho Shin, Kicheol Song, Nari Ahn, Jinsoo Park
Tags
microsphere
elasto-inertial microfluidic separation
dimensionless analysis
Newtonian fluids
viscoelastic fluids
polystyrene microspheres
separation technique
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