Issue 40, 2021

Constriction length dependent instabilities in the microfluidic entry flow of polymer solutions

Abstract

Transport phenomena of fluids and particles through contraction and/or expansion geometries have relevance in many applications. Polymer solutions are often the transporter in these processes, giving rise to flow complexities. The separation distance between a contraction and a following expansion in microfluidic entry flow can affect the interplay between the shear and extension force dominated flow regimes, but the process is still little understood. We investigate the rheological responses of such constriction length dependent instabilities with three different polymer solutions and water in planar contraction–expansion microchannels differing only in the constriction length. The viscoelastic polyethylene oxide (PEO) solution is found to exhibit strong constriction length-dependent instabilities in both the contraction and expansion flows. Such a dependence is, however, completely absent from the flow of shear-thinning xanthan gum (XG) solution and Newtonian water. Interestingly, it is only present in the expansion flow of the both shear thinning and viscoelastic polyacrylamide (PAA) solution.

Graphical abstract: Constriction length dependent instabilities in the microfluidic entry flow of polymer solutions

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Sep 2021
Accepted
24 Sep 2021
First published
24 Sep 2021

Soft Matter, 2021,17, 9198-9209

Constriction length dependent instabilities in the microfluidic entry flow of polymer solutions

M. K. Raihan, S. Wu, Y. Song and X. Xuan, Soft Matter, 2021, 17, 9198 DOI: 10.1039/D1SM01325D

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