2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(232a) Microparticle Flow in Liquid Medium: 3-D Velocity Measurements in Microchannels
Authors
Fluidic devices made in the micron size range offer significant advantages over their large-scale counterparts in fields such as medical diagnostics, pharmaceuticals, and security. These advantages include reducing the reagent used, throughput time, and cost, while increasing accuracy. A method for recording high speed, high sensitivity, and high-resolution images of particulate flow in a liquid medium through microchannels is necessary to enable control and design of novel microfluidic devices. This is critical to the design of microfluidic processes involving liquid-particulate interactions such as microreactions, particulate sampling, and blood flow.
Computational fluid dynamics is also used to simulate the 3D particulate flow in the micorchannel. Various fluid-particle and particle-particle interactive forces are considered, and the particle trajectories are solved using lagrangian method. Experimental and computational results for pressure driven, Poiseuille flow are presented and compared. A Confocal Micro-Particle Tracking (CM-PT) system with the ability to quantify 3-D multiphase fluid flows in microchannels is demonstrated.