New publication: Electrothermal flow effects in insulating (electrodeless) dielectrophoresis systems

Electrothermal flow effects in insulating (electrodeless) dielectrophoresis systems

Benjamin G. Hawkins, Brian J. Kirby

ELECTROPHORESIS, Special Issue: Miniaturization, Volume 31, Issue 22, pages 3622–3633, November 2010, DOI: 10.1002/elps.201000429

Keywords:

  • Electrohydrodynamics;
  • Electrothermal Flow;
  • Insulating dielectrophoresis;
  • Localized Joule heating

Abstract

We simulate electrothermally induced flow in polymeric, insulator-based dielectrophoresis (iDEP) systems with DC-offset, AC electric fields at finite thermal Péclet number, and we identify key regimes where electrothermal (ET) effects enhance particle deflection and trapping. We study a single, two-dimensional constriction in channel depth with parametric variations in electric field, channel geometry, fluid conductivity, particle electrophoretic (EP) mobility, and channel electroosmotic (EO) mobility. We report the effects of increasing particle EP mobility, channel EO mobility, and AC and DC field magnitudes on the mean constriction temperature and particle behavior. Specifically, we quantify particle deflection and trapping, referring to the deviation of particles from their pathlines due to dielectrophoresis as they pass a const riction and the stagnation of particles due to negative dielectrophoresis near a constriction, respectively. This work includes the coupling between fluid, heat, and electromagnetic phenomena via temperature-dependent physical parameters. Results indicate that the temperature distribution depends strongly on the fluid conductivity and electric field magnitude, and particle deflection and trapping depend strongly on the channel geometry. Electrothermal (ET) effects perturb the EO flow field, creating vorticity near the channel constriction and enhancing the deflection and trapping effects. ET effects alter particle deflection and trapping responses in insulator-based dielectrophoresis devices, especially at intermediate device aspect ratios (2≤r≤7) in solutions of higher conductivity (σm≥1×10−3  S/m). The impact of ET effects on particle deflection and trapping are diminished when particle EP mobility or channel EO mobility is high. In almost all cases, ET effects enhance negative dielectrophoretic particle deflection and trapping phenomena.

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