A microfluidic band-pass filter for flexible fiber separation
Li Zhibo, Bielinski Cl\'ement, Lindner Anke, Delmotte Blaise, du Roure Olivia

TL;DR
This paper introduces a microfluidic band-pass filter that uses tilted pillar arrays to efficiently separate flexible fibers based on length, expanding the capabilities of particle sorting technologies for anisotropic objects.
Contribution
The study demonstrates a novel microfluidic design that selectively separates flexible fibers by length using band-pass filtering, combining experiments and simulations to reveal underlying transport mechanisms.
Findings
Fibers near the array period are selectively displaced laterally.
Short fibers zigzag with minimal lateral migration.
Long fibers deform and follow complex trajectories with little lateral displacement.
Abstract
The control of particle trajectories in structured microfluidic environments has significantly advanced sorting technologies, most notably through deterministic lateral displacement (DLD). While previous work has largely targeted rigid, near-spherical particles, the sorting of flexible, anisotropic objects such as fibers remains largely unexplored. Here, we combine experiments and simulations to demonstrate how tilted pillar arrays enable efficient, length-based separation of flexible fibers. We discover that these arrays act as band-pass filters, selectively inducing lateral migration in fibers whose lengths are close to the array period. Fibers significantly shorter or longer exhibit minimal lateral deviation. This migration arises from the interplay of fluid-structure interactions between fibers and the complex flow and steric interactions with the pillars. Depending on their length,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrofluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies · Micro and Nano Robotics · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization
