Non-inertial hydrodynamics of manipulating particle transport
Abstract
Inspired by numerous lab on a chip, biomedical and bioengineering applications such as cell sorting, focusing, trapping, and filtering of particles, manipulation of micron sized particle trajectories has been of significant interest in the context of microfluidics. Systematic deflection of microparticles away from their initial streamlines is a central objective in microfluidic particle manipulation. In many widely used microfluidic platforms including deterministic lateral displacement (DLD) devices, density matched, force free particles suspended in low Reynolds number flows encounter arrays of obstacles that potentially breaks the flow symmetry and alter their trajectories. Despite the prevalence of these devices, the physical mechanism responsible for particle deflection from encountering obstacle wall in strictly non inertial flows (Stokes flows) remains incompletely understood and is often attributed to short range contact interactions rather than hydrodynamic effects.
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