Issue 14, 2010

Thermocapillary actuation by optimized resistor pattern: bubbles and droplets displacing, switching and trapping

Abstract

We report a novel method for bubble or droplet displacement, capture and switching within a bifurcation channel for applications in digital microfluidics based on the Marangoni effect, i.e. the appearance of thermocapillary tangential interface stresses stemming from local surface tension variations. The specificity of the reported actuation is that heating is provided by an optimized resistor pattern (B. Selva, J. Marchalot and M.-C. Jullien, An optimized resistor pattern for temperature gradient control in microfluidics, J. Micromech. Microeng., 2009, 19, 065002) leading to a constant temperature gradient along a microfluidic cavity. In this context, bubbles or droplets to be actuated entail a surface force originating from the thermal Marangoni effect. This actuator has been characterized (B. Selva, I. Cantat, and M.-C. Jullien, Migration of a bubble towards a higher surface tension under the effect of thermocapillary stress, preprint, 2009) and it was found that the bubble/droplet (called further element) is driven toward a high surface tension region, i.e. toward cold region, and the element velocity increases while decreasing the cavity thickness. Taking advantage of these properties three applications are presented: (1) element displacement, (2) element switching, detailed in a given range of working, in which elements are redirected towards a specific evacuation, (3) a system able to trap, and consequently stop on demand, the elements on an alveolus structure while the continuous phase is still flowing. The strength of this method lies in its simplicity: single layer system, in situ heating leading to a high level of integration, low power consumption (P < 0.4 W), low applied voltage (about 10 V), and finally this system is able to manipulate elements within a flow velocity up to 1 cm sāˆ’1.

Graphical abstract: Thermocapillary actuation by optimized resistor pattern: bubbles and droplets displacing, switching and trapping

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Jan 2010
Accepted
26 Mar 2010
First published
05 May 2010

Lab Chip, 2010,10, 1835-1840

Thermocapillary actuation by optimized resistor pattern: bubbles and droplets displacing, switching and trapping

B. Selva, V. Miralles, I. Cantat and M. Jullien, Lab Chip, 2010, 10, 1835 DOI: 10.1039/C001900C

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