TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of complex vortices generated by asymmetrically distributed induced charges on fluid flow and mass transfer in pressure driven micromixers
AU - Yuan, Shuai
AU - Peng, Tao
AU - Liu, Xiaodong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/7
Y1 - 2025/7
N2 - Microscale electric field-induced vortical structures, arising from spatial accumulation of induced charges, demonstrate significant potential for augmenting mixing performance in low Reynolds number (Re) laminar flows. This investigation establishes a computational framework incorporating an asymmetric conductive plate with hybrid linear-curvilinear edges to systematically elucidate the coupling mechanisms between inhomogeneous charge distributions, complex vortex generation, and pressure-driven molecular transport. Our findings reveal that under balanced pressure-driven flow (PDF) and induced-charge electroosmotic flow (EOF), expanding the polarization area promotes bilateral charge accumulation along curvilinear boundaries, creating localized electric field minima that suppress interfacial slip velocity and mixing efficiency. In contrast, linear edges exhibit maximum slip velocities, generating vortex pairs with enhanced convection capacity. Notably, plate reorientation and increased curvature radius amplify surface electric field asymmetry, achieving superior mass transfer through either expanded vortex perturbation domains or intensified rotational intensity. When PDF dominates EOF by 25-fold, the weakened charge heterogeneity minimally stimulates vortex development, rendering interfacial perturbation the primary mixing driver. This work advances fundamental understanding of asymmetric charge-polarization dynamics in microscale flow manipulation, offering critical insights for designing active micromixers.
AB - Microscale electric field-induced vortical structures, arising from spatial accumulation of induced charges, demonstrate significant potential for augmenting mixing performance in low Reynolds number (Re) laminar flows. This investigation establishes a computational framework incorporating an asymmetric conductive plate with hybrid linear-curvilinear edges to systematically elucidate the coupling mechanisms between inhomogeneous charge distributions, complex vortex generation, and pressure-driven molecular transport. Our findings reveal that under balanced pressure-driven flow (PDF) and induced-charge electroosmotic flow (EOF), expanding the polarization area promotes bilateral charge accumulation along curvilinear boundaries, creating localized electric field minima that suppress interfacial slip velocity and mixing efficiency. In contrast, linear edges exhibit maximum slip velocities, generating vortex pairs with enhanced convection capacity. Notably, plate reorientation and increased curvature radius amplify surface electric field asymmetry, achieving superior mass transfer through either expanded vortex perturbation domains or intensified rotational intensity. When PDF dominates EOF by 25-fold, the weakened charge heterogeneity minimally stimulates vortex development, rendering interfacial perturbation the primary mixing driver. This work advances fundamental understanding of asymmetric charge-polarization dynamics in microscale flow manipulation, offering critical insights for designing active micromixers.
KW - Induced charge
KW - Mass transfer
KW - Micromixing
KW - Pressure driven flow
KW - Vortex
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105001260892
U2 - 10.1016/j.chaos.2025.116373
DO - 10.1016/j.chaos.2025.116373
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105001260892
SN - 0960-0779
VL - 196
JO - Chaos, Solitons and Fractals
JF - Chaos, Solitons and Fractals
M1 - 116373
ER -