Issue 26, 2024

Emulsions in microfluidic channels with asymmetric boundary conditions and directional surface roughness: stress and rheology

Abstract

The flow of emulsions in confined microfluidic channels is affected by surface roughness. Directional roughness effects have recently been reported in channels with asymmetric boundary conditions featuring a flat wall, and a wall textured with directional roughness, the latter promoting a change in the velocity profiles when the flow direction of emulsions is inverted [D. Filippi et al., Adv. Mater. Technol., 2023, 8, 2201748]. An operative protocol is needed to reconstruct the stress profile inside the channel from velocity data to shed light on the trigger of the directional response. To this aim, we performed lattice Boltzmann numerical simulations of the flow of model emulsions with a minimalist model of directional roughness in two dimensions: a confined microfluidic channel with one flat wall and the other patterned by right-angle triangular-shaped posts. Simulations are essential to develop a protocol based on mechanical arguments to reconstruct stress profiles. Hence, one can analyze data to relate directional effects in velocity profiles to different rheological responses close to the rough walls associated with opposite flow directions. We finally show the universality of this protocol by applying it to other realizations of directional roughness by considering experimental data on emulsions in a microfluidic channel featuring a flat wall and a wall textured by herringbone-shaped roughness.

Graphical abstract: Emulsions in microfluidic channels with asymmetric boundary conditions and directional surface roughness: stress and rheology

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
11 Jan 2024
Accepted
21 May 2024
First published
23 May 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 5203-5211

Emulsions in microfluidic channels with asymmetric boundary conditions and directional surface roughness: stress and rheology

F. Pelusi, D. Filippi, L. Derzsi, M. Pierno and M. Sbragaglia, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 5203 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00041B

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