Designing a Microfluidic Chip Driven by Carbon Dioxide for Separation and Detection of Particulate Matter

Micromachines (Basel). 2023 Jan 11;14(1):183. doi: 10.3390/mi14010183.

Abstract

Atmospheric particulate pollution poses a great danger to the environment and human health, and there is a strong need to develop equipment for collecting and separating particulate matter of different particle sizes to study the effects of particulate matter on human health. A virtual impactor is a particle separation device based on the principle of inertial separation which provides scientific guidance for identifying the composition characteristics of particles. Much existing virtual impactor research focuses on the design of structural dimensions with little exploration of the effect of fluid properties on performance. In this paper, a microfluidic chip with a cutoff diameter of 1.85 µm was designed based on computational fluid dynamics and numerically simulated via finite element analysis to analyze important parameters such as inlet flow rate, splitting ratio and fluid properties. By numerical simulation of the split ratio, we found that the obtained collection efficiency curves could not be combined into one characteristic curve by the Stk0.5 scaling method. We therefore propose a modified Stokes number equation for predicting the cutoff diameter at different splitting ratios. The collection efficiency curves of different fluids as microfluidic chip media were plotted, and the results show that the cut particle size was reduced from 2.5 µm to 1.85 µm after replacing conventional fluid air with CO2 formed by dry ice sublimation. This is a decrease of approximately 26%, which is superior to other existing methods for reducing the cutoff diameter.

Keywords: carbon dioxide; computational fluid dynamics; dynamic viscosity; microfluidic chip; particulate matter; virtual impactor.