Dynamics of small particle inertial migration in curved square ducts
Kyung Ha, Brendan Harding, Andrea L. Bertozzi, Yvonne M. Stokes

TL;DR
This study models the inertial migration of small particles in curved square microchannels, revealing how the interplay of forces influences particle trajectories and enabling size-based particle segregation by adjusting duct curvature.
Contribution
A simplified force model using a bifurcation parameter $$, demonstrating how particle dynamics transition between stable foci and limit cycles in curved ducts.
Findings
Existence of a bifurcation parameter $$ controlling particle migration behavior.
Identification of stable foci and limit cycles depending on $$.
Potential for size-based particle separation by tuning duct bend radius.
Abstract
Microchannels are well-known in microfluidic applications for the control and separation of microdroplets and cells. Often the objects in the flow experience inertial effects, resulting in dynamics that is a departure from the underlying channel flow dynamics. This paper considers small neutrally buoyant spherical particles suspended in flow through a curved duct having a square cross-section. The particle experiences a combination of inertial lift force induced by the disturbance from the primary flow along the duct, and drag from the secondary vortices in the cross-section, which drive migration of the particle within the cross-section. We construct a simplified model that preserves the core topology of the force field yet depends on a single parameter , quantifying the relative strength of the two forces. We show that is a bifurcation parameter for the dynamical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Granular flow and fluidized beds
