Issue 14, 2012

Particle sorting by a structured microfluidic ratchet device with tunable selectivity: theory and experiment

Abstract

We theoretically predict and experimentally demonstrate that several different particle species can be separated from each other by means of a ratchet device, consisting of periodically arranged triangular (ratchet) shaped obstacles. We propose an explicit algorithm for suitably tailoring the externally applied, time-dependent voltage protocol so that one or several, arbitrarily selected particle species are forced to migrate oppositely to all the remaining species. As an example we present numerical simulations for a mixture of five species, labelled according to their increasing size, so that species 2 and 4 simultaneously move in one direction and species 1, 3, and 5 in the other. The selection of species to be separated from the others can be changed at any time by simply adapting the voltage protocol. This general theoretical concept to utilize one device for many different sorting tasks is experimentally confirmed for a mixture of three colloidal particle species.

Graphical abstract: Particle sorting by a structured microfluidic ratchet device with tunable selectivity: theory and experiment

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Oct 2011
Accepted
25 Jan 2012
First published
28 Feb 2012

Soft Matter, 2012,8, 3900-3907

Particle sorting by a structured microfluidic ratchet device with tunable selectivity: theory and experiment

L. Bogunovic, R. Eichhorn, J. Regtmeier, D. Anselmetti and P. Reimann, Soft Matter, 2012, 8, 3900 DOI: 10.1039/C2SM07053G

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