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Electric field-induced dipolar filaments and electroosmotic pump with a giant onsager coefficient

Authors :
Sheng, Ping
Dai, Cheng
Sheng, Ping
Dai, Cheng
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

This thesis focuses on two topics involving electric field-fluid interactions. The first is the experimental realization of a coherent, macroscopic state of aligned dipolar filaments of water molecules under an applied electric field. The second is the conception and design of an electroosmotic micropump with gate voltage-induced giant Onsager coefficient. The first topic is relevant to a new kind of electrorheological (ER) fluids, purely composed of water molecules dispersed in silicone oil. This is inspired by the microscopic mechanism of giant ER (GER) effect as well as water’s evident polar characteristic when confined in nanoscale structures. We fabricated a setup including an active region with 60% porosity to permit only vaporized water molecules passing through. The vaporized water molecules from a thermostatic reservoir are shown to form filamentary or columnar structures, penetrating through the porous silicone oil, as a state with minimum energy in response to an external electric field. The formation of such structures is visualized directly by utilizing water-soluble fluorescent probe and captured by inverted confocal microscopy through a transparent electrode. The attendant GER effect, represented by a well-defined yield stress, is measured as a manifestation of such a coherent new molecular state. A phenomenological theory is presented to support the experimental data, with excellent quantitative agreement. The second topic of this thesis is the conception and design of a novel micropump actuated by the electroosmotic (EO) effect. The efficiency for the traditional EO micropumps is limited by the non-slip boundary condition at the liquid/solid interface, typically not surpassing 1%. This ceiling can be broken by our new design of gate voltage-induced EO micropump coupled with slipping effect from superhydrophobic surfaces. The basic idea is first separating the bulk ions by using a pulsed gate voltage, then driving the separated bulk ions with tangent

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1376637725
Document Type :
Electronic Resource