Surface Conduction and Electroosmotic Flow around Charged Dielectric Pillar Arrays in Microchannels
Keon Huh, So-Yoon Yang, Jae Suk Park, Jung A Lee, Hyomin Lee, Sung, Jae Kim

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how surface conduction and electroosmotic flow around dielectric pillar arrays enhance ion transport in microchannels, with microstructure arrangement critically affecting flow patterns and efficiency.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental and simulation evidence of the impact of microstructure arrangement on ion transport via surface conduction and electroosmotic flow.
Findings
Surface conduction and EOF accelerate ion transport.
Microstructure arrangement significantly influences flow patterns.
Aligned pillars create additional ion pathways.
Abstract
Dielectric microstructures have been reported to have negative influences on perm-selective ion transportation because ions do not migrate in areas where the structures are located. However, the structure can promote the transportation if the membrane is confined to a microscopical scale. In such scale where the area to volume ratio is significantly large, the primary driving mechanisms of the ion transportation are transited from electro-convective instability (EOI) to surface conduction (SC) and electroosmotic flow (EOF). Here we provide rigorous evidence on how SC and EOF around the dielectric microstructures can accelerate the ion transportation by multi-physics simulations and experimental visualizations. The microstructures further polarize the ion distribution by SC and EOF so that ion carriers can travel to the membrane more efficiently. Furthermore, we verified, for the first…
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