Hydrodynamics of the Developing Region in Hydrophobic Microchannels: A Dissipative Particle Dynamics Study
S. Kumar Ranjith, B. S. V. Patnaik, Srikanth Vedantam

TL;DR
This study uses Dissipative Particle Dynamics to investigate steady flow development in microchannels with hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces, revealing that hydrophobic strips can significantly shorten the flow development length.
Contribution
First application of DPD to model hydrodynamics in microchannels with mixed surface wettability, introducing a new boundary modeling method and analyzing flow development.
Findings
Hydrophobic surfaces modeled with partial-slip boundary conditions.
Hydrophilic surfaces modeled with no-slip boundary conditions.
Hydrophobic strips reduce the flow's developing length.
Abstract
Dissipative Particle Dynamics (DPD) is becoming a popular particle based method to study flow through microchannels due to the ease with which the presence of biological cells or DNA chains can be modeled. Many Lab-On-Chip (LOC) devices require the ability to manipulate the transport of cells or DNA chains in the fluid flow. Microchannel surfaces coated with combinations of hydrophilic and hydrophobic materials have been found useful for this purpose. In this work, we have numerically studied the hydrodynamics of a steady nonuniform developing flow between two infinite parallel plates with hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces using DPD for the first time. The hydrophobic and hydrophilic surfaces were modeled using partial-slip and no-slip boundary conditions respectively in the simulations. We also propose a new method to model the inflow and outflow boundaries for the DPD simulations.…
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