Novel Inertial Self-Assembly Dynamics and Long-Range Spatial Ordering of Interacting Droplet Ensembles in Confined Microfluidic Flows
Wenyang Jing, Hee-Sun Han

TL;DR
This paper uncovers novel self-assembly behaviors of liquid droplets in microfluidic channels, revealing that asymmetric geometries and low inertia promote long-range spatial ordering, with implications for microfluidic applications.
Contribution
It demonstrates that asymmetric serpentine microchannels enable long-range droplet ordering at low inertia, contrasting with traditional inertial microfluidics, and explores the influence of Marangoni effects.
Findings
Asymmetric serpentine channels achieve long-range droplet ordering.
Higher inertia does not improve spatial order in straight channels.
Marangoni effects influence droplet spacing and ordering.
Abstract
The multiphase flow of droplets is widespread, both at the industrial and the microscale, for both biological and non-biological applications alike. But the ensemble interactions of such systems are inherently nonlinear and complex, compounded by interfacial effects, making it a difficult many-body problem for theory. In comparison, the self-assembly dynamics of solid particles in flow have long been described and successfully exploited in the field of inertial microfluidics, where particle crystals can be realized from inertial forces and hydrodynamic interactions. Here, we report novel self-assembly dynamics of liquid drops in confined microfluidic channels that contrast starkly with the established paradigm of inertial microfluidics: higher inertia leads to better spatial ordering. Instead, we find that the conventional straight wall channel geometry not only fails to achieve regular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Electrowetting and Microfluidic Technologies · Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
