Electrothermal pumping with interdigitated electrodes and resistive heaters
Electrothermal pumping with interdigitated electrodes and resistive heaters
Interdigitated electrodes are used in electrokinetic lab-on-a-chip devices for dielectrophoretic trapping and characterization of suspended particles, as well as the production of field-induced fluid flow via AC electroosomosis and electrothermal mechanisms. However, the optimum design for dielectrophoresis, that if symmetrical electrodes, cannot induce bulk electrohydrodynamic pumping. In addition, the mechanism of intrinsic electrothermal pumping is affected by the properties of the fluid, with thermal fields being generated by Joule Heating. This work demonstrates the incorporation of an underlying thin film heater, electrically isolated from the interdigitated electrodes by an insulator layer, to enhance bulk electrothermal pumping. The use of integrated heaters allows the thermal field generation to be controlled independently of the electric field. Numerical simulations are performed to demonstrate the importance of geometrical arrangement of the heater with respect to the interdigitated electrodes, as well as electrode size, spacing, and arrangement. The optimization of such a system is a careful balance between electrokinetics, heat transfer, and fluid dynamics. The heater location and electrode spacing influence the rate of electrothermal pumping significantly more than electrode width and insulator layer thickness. This demonstration will aid in the development of microfluidic electrokinetic systems that want to utilize the advantages associated with electrothermal pumping while simultaneously applying other lab-on-a-chip electrokinetics like dielectrophoresis.
1681-1689
Williams, Stuart J.
a737262a-289a-42ab-bb5b-777571ff6203
Green, Nicolas
d9b47269-c426-41fd-a41d-5f4579faa581
August 2015
Williams, Stuart J.
a737262a-289a-42ab-bb5b-777571ff6203
Green, Nicolas
d9b47269-c426-41fd-a41d-5f4579faa581
Williams, Stuart J. and Green, Nicolas
(2015)
Electrothermal pumping with interdigitated electrodes and resistive heaters.
[in special issue: Focus on AES Meeting 2014]
Electrophoresis, 36 (15), .
(doi:10.1002/elps.201500112).
Abstract
Interdigitated electrodes are used in electrokinetic lab-on-a-chip devices for dielectrophoretic trapping and characterization of suspended particles, as well as the production of field-induced fluid flow via AC electroosomosis and electrothermal mechanisms. However, the optimum design for dielectrophoresis, that if symmetrical electrodes, cannot induce bulk electrohydrodynamic pumping. In addition, the mechanism of intrinsic electrothermal pumping is affected by the properties of the fluid, with thermal fields being generated by Joule Heating. This work demonstrates the incorporation of an underlying thin film heater, electrically isolated from the interdigitated electrodes by an insulator layer, to enhance bulk electrothermal pumping. The use of integrated heaters allows the thermal field generation to be controlled independently of the electric field. Numerical simulations are performed to demonstrate the importance of geometrical arrangement of the heater with respect to the interdigitated electrodes, as well as electrode size, spacing, and arrangement. The optimization of such a system is a careful balance between electrokinetics, heat transfer, and fluid dynamics. The heater location and electrode spacing influence the rate of electrothermal pumping significantly more than electrode width and insulator layer thickness. This demonstration will aid in the development of microfluidic electrokinetic systems that want to utilize the advantages associated with electrothermal pumping while simultaneously applying other lab-on-a-chip electrokinetics like dielectrophoresis.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 May 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 July 2015
Published date: August 2015
Organisations:
Nanoelectronics and Nanotechnology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 392961
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/392961
ISSN: 0173-0835
PURE UUID: ffeaa4a5-acc1-4511-93d2-c34aaff8bc9e
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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2016 11:12
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:20
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Author:
Stuart J. Williams
Author:
Nicolas Green
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