Joule heating and heat transfer in poly(dimethylsiloxane) microfluidic systems
Abstract
Joule heating is a significant problem in electrokinetically driven microfluidic chips, particularly polymeric systems where low thermal conductivities amplify the difficulty in rejecting this internally generated heat. In this work, a combined experimental (using a microscale thermometry technique) and numerical (using a 3D “whole-chip” finite element model) approach is used to examine Joule heating and heat transfer at a microchannel intersection in poly(dimethylsiloxane)
(PDMS), and hybrid PDMS/Glass microfluidic systems. In general the numerical predictions and the experimental results agree quite well (typically within ± 3 °C), both showing dramatic temperature gradients at the intersection. At high potential field strengths a nearly five fold increase in the maximum