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Review of nonlinear electrokinetic flows in insulator-based dielectrophoresis: From induced charge to Joule heating effects

Journal

ELECTROPHORESIS
Volume 43, Issue 1-2, Pages 167-189

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/elps.202100090

Keywords

Electrokinetic; Electrothermal flow; Induced charge electroosmotic flow; Joule heating; Microfluidics

Funding

  1. NSF [CBET-0853873, CBET-1704379, CBET-2 100 772]
  2. Clemson University through the Departmental Honors program
  3. Clemson University through the Creative Inquiry program

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Insulator-based dielectrophoresis (iDEP) is increasingly used for particle manipulation in microfluidic applications. However, the presence of insulators can cause two nonlinear electrokinetic flows, induced charge electroosmotic (ICEO) flow and electrothermal flow, which vary nonlinearly with the applied electric field. These flows have both been utilized to promote certain applications and may affect the linear electrokinetic motion of particles.
Insulator-based dielectrophoresis (iDEP) has been increasingly used for particle manipulation in various microfluidic applications. It exploits insulating structures to constrict and/or curve electric field lines to generate field gradients for particle dielectrophoresis. However, the presence of these insulators, especially those with sharp edges, causes two nonlinear electrokinetic flows, which, if sufficiently strong, may disturb the otherwise linear electrokinetic motion of particles and affect the iDEP performance. One is induced charge electroosmotic (ICEO) flow because of the polarization of the insulators, and the other is electrothermal flow because of the amplified Joule heating in the fluid around the insulators. Both flows vary nonlinearly with the applied electric field (either DC or AC) and exhibit in the form of fluid vortices, which have been utilized to promote some applications while being suppressed in others. The effectiveness of iDEP benefits from a comprehensive understanding of the nonlinear electrokinetic flows, which is complicated by the involvement of the entire iDEP device into electric polarization and thermal diffusion. This article is aimed to review the works on both the fundamentals and applications of ICEO and electrothermal flows in iDEP microdevices. A personal perspective of some future research directions in the field is also given.

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