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Boundary elements method for microfluidic two-phase flows in shallow channels
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- In the following work we apply the boundary element method to two-phase flows in shallow microchannels, where one phase is dispersed and does not wet the channel walls. These kinds of flows are often encountered in microfluidic Lab-on-a-Chip devices and characterized by low Reynolds and low capillary numbers. Assuming that these channels are homogeneous in height and have a large aspect ratio, we use depth-averaged equations to describe these two-phase flows using the Brinkman equation, which constitutes a refinement of Darcy's law. These partial differential equations are discretized and solved numerically using the boundary element method, where a stabilization scheme is applied to the surface tension terms, allowing for a less restrictive time step at low capillary numbers. The convergence of the numerical algorithm is checked against a static analytical solution and on a dynamic test case. Finally the algorithm is applied to the non-linear development of the Saffman-Taylor instability and compared to experimental studies of droplet deformation in expanding flows.<br />accepted for publication, Computers and Fluids 2014
- Subjects :
- Work (thermodynamics)
General Computer Science
Discretization
Capillary action
Boundary (topology)
FOS: Physical sciences
Geometry
01 natural sciences
010305 fluids & plasmas
Surface tension
Physics::Fluid Dynamics
0103 physical sciences
Microhydrodynamics
010306 general physics
Boundary element method
Droplets
Mathematics
Partial differential equation
General Engineering
Fluid Dynamics (physics.flu-dyn)
Mechanics
Free interface
Physics - Fluid Dynamics
Lab On A Chip
Gauss block elimination
Interface stabilization
Dynamic testing
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....150303dd88bdbb54d25f6fa3ac6fcbab