Abstract

We propose a novel technique, consistent with the induced charge electrokinetic (ICEK) phenomenon, for the efficient mixing of solute species at a microfluidic scale. A nonuniform bipolar electric double layer develops in the presence of an external electric field over a polarizable object is better known as the ICEK phenomenon. This ICEK is one of the most favorable techniques preferred for enhanced solute mixing in on-chip microfluidic platforms. In the purview of the ICEK phenomenon, instead of using perfectly conducting polarizable objects, for the first time in this study, we employ polarizable dielectric objects of different sizes and shapes for efficient mixing of solute species. We show that different types of vortices developed in the flow pathway adjacent to the polarizable dielectric blocks help in yielding efficient mixing in the proposed configuration. The novelty of our work is embellished in two different perspectives, that is, first, concentrating on the influences of the physical properties of the polarizable dielectric block on the underlying mixing, and, second, focusing on their sizes, shapes, and the arrangements in tuning the underlying mixingphenomena.

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