Abstract

Micromixing is a key process in microfluidics technology. However, rapid and efficient fluid mixing is difficult to achieve inside the microchannels due to unfavourable laminar flow. Active micromixers employing ultrasound and thermal energy are effective in enhancing the micromixing process; however, integration of these energy sources within the devices is a non-trivial task. In this study, ultrasound and thermal energy have been extraneously applied at the upstream of the micromixer to significantly reduce fabrication complexity. A novel Dean micromixer was laser-fabricated to passively increase mixing performance and compared with T- and Y-micromixers at Reynolds numbers between 5 to 100. The micromixers had a relatively higher mixing index at lower Reynolds number, attributed to higher residence time. Dean micromixer exhibits higher mixing performance (about 27% better) than T- and Y-micromixers for 40 ≤ Re ≤ 100. Influence of ultrasound and heat on mixing is more significant at 5 ≤ Re ≤ 20 due to the prolonged mechanical effects. It can be observed that mixing index increases by about 6% to 10% once the temperature of the sonicated fluids increases from 30 °C to 60 °C. The proposed method is potentially useful as direct contact of the inductive energy sources may cause unwanted substrate damage and structural deformation especially for applications in biological analysis and chemical synthesis.

Highlights

  • A novel passive Dean micromixer based on the concept of unbalanced Dean vortices

  • Dean micromixer based on themicromachining concept of unbalanced vortices was proposed and fabricated by means of laser process.Dean

  • Micromixer is a fundamental aspect of fluid manipulation is microfluidic systems

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Microfluidics is an evolving field, with applications providing significant control and manipulation of fluids within the microenvironment [1,2]. Micromixing is the backbone of microfluidic devices for the applications of reagents and analytes detection, drug screening, diseases diagnosis and various fluidic operations at microscale [3,4,5]. The micromixing characteristics of microfluidics are contrary to mechanical mixing in which the latter falls in a turbulence regime, whereas the former is associated with laminar regime as a consequence of miniaturized feature of microchannel having hydraulic diameters of less than several hundred microns

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