Issue 6, 2022

Conductivity-difference-enhanced DC dielectrophoretic particle separation in a microfluidic chip

Abstract

A conductivity-difference-based method for increasing dielectrophoretic (DEP) force for particle separation in a microfluidic chip is presented in this paper. By applying a direct-current (DC) voltage across two immiscible electrolyte solutions with a conductivity difference, an enhanced electric field gradient is generated at the liquid–liquid interface. Theoretical analysis based on equivalent circuit theory found that the gradient of the electric field squared increases with the decrease in the conductivity ratio of the two liquids (main channel to the side channel). As a result, the particle separation distance (an indicator of DEP force) increases with the decrease in the conductivity ratio, which is both numerically predicted and experimentally verified. Numerical simulations also show that the separation distance increases with the increase in the magnitude of the electric field and the decrease in the width of the orifice. The method presented in this paper is simple and advantageous for increasing DEP force without applying higher DC voltages or fabricating smaller orifices.

Graphical abstract: Conductivity-difference-enhanced DC dielectrophoretic particle separation in a microfluidic chip

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Dec 2021
Accepted
12 Feb 2022
First published
14 Feb 2022

Analyst, 2022,147, 1106-1116

Conductivity-difference-enhanced DC dielectrophoretic particle separation in a microfluidic chip

D. Li, W. Yu, T. Zhou, M. Li, Y. Song and D. Li, Analyst, 2022, 147, 1106 DOI: 10.1039/D1AN02196F

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