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Novel tweezers using acoustically oscillating twin bubbles

Authors :
Jung Min Won
Kyung Ho Lee
Sang Kug Chung
Jun Hyup Lee
Source :
2011 16th International Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference.
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
IEEE, 2011.

Abstract

This paper describes a novel tweezing system using cavitational microstreaming flows generated by acoustically oscillating twin bubbles for non-contact micromanipulation. A tweezing system with a single acoustically oscillating bubble attached on the tip of a rod integrated with a three-dimensional traverse system is firstly tested to manipulate a fish egg (1 mm diameter) in an aqueous medium. Although the flow generated from the single oscillating bubble is strong enough to push and move the fish egg, the moving direction of the fish egg is not controllable. To improve the control of the manipulation, identical twin bubbles, which have the same size and resonant frequency, are applied. To obtain the identical bubbles, an electrolysis chip consisting of sharp tip-shaped electrodes is microfabricated, and each bubble is generated from the chip by controlling the applied voltage and time and then transported to the tips of a U-shaped rod. Manipulation of a fish egg (1 mm diameter) and glass beads (100 µm diameter) is experimentally demonstrated using acoustically oscillating twin bubbles. Using a high speed camera, the force generated by the acoustically oscillating bubbles and its direction are analyzed in various acoustic excitation conditions. The results show that the generated force is proportional to the bubble oscillation amplitude, and the direction of the force depends on the distance between a bubble and object. A steel ball (500 µm diameter) is used for the investigation of the force direction. When a bubble (600 µm diameter) is acoustically excited, the steel ball is pulled into the oscillating bubble in the short distance (

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2011 16th International Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0c6fa83405dcfed1ab7bbfa26679fac2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/transducers.2011.5969654