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An experimental characterization of a tunable separation device

Abstract

By the use of an experimental setup for microfluidic
flows, we have characterized the separation and
concentration characteristics of the so-called Trilobite™
separation unit. Our separation unit consists of microfluidic
channels and an elliptical separation geometry with a solid
and a permeable wall region. We show that it is possible
to adjust the thickness of different flow layers by changing
the flow rates and pressure drop over the permeable wall.
For high pressure drops, the separator shows promising
concentration characteristics. For low pressure drops, an
increase in flow rate results in a thinning of the flow layers.
For sufficiently high flow rates, it should therefore be possible
to create flow layers sufficiently thin that the particle
separation is entirely dominated by hydrodynamic forces.
This, in turn, will enable clog-free particle separation.

Category

Academic article

Client

  • Research Council of Norway (RCN) / 232148

Language

English

Author(s)

Affiliation

  • University of Oslo
  • Trilobite Microsystems AS
  • SINTEF Digital / Smart Sensors and Microsystems

Year

2016

Published in

Microfluidics and Nanofluidics

ISSN

1613-4982

Publisher

Springer

Volume

20

Issue

12

View this publication at Cristin