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Polish Academy of Sciences

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Volkert van Steijn

Delft University of Technology (NL)

Recent publications
1.  Kurniawan T., Sahebdivani M., Zaremba D., Błoński S., Garstecki P., van Steijn V., Korczyk P.M., Formation of droplets in microfluidic cross-junctions at small capillary numbers: Breakdown of the classical squeezing regime, Chemical Engineering Journal, ISSN: 1385-8947, DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2023.145601, Vol.474, pp.14560-14560, 2023

Abstract:
Two decades of research on droplet formation in microchannels have led to the widely accepted view that droplets form through the squeezing mechanism when interfacial forces dominate over viscous forces. The initially surprising finding that the volume of the droplets is insensitive to the relative importance of these two forces is nowadays well understood from the constrained deformation of the droplet interface during formation. In this work, we show a lower limit of the squeezing mechanism for droplets produced in microfluidic cross-junctions. Below this limit, in the leaking regime, which was recently discovered for droplets produced in T-junctions, the volume of the produced droplets strongly depends on the relative importance of interfacial and viscous forces, as captured by the capillary number. We reveal a fundamental difference in the mechanisms at play in the leaking regime between T- and cross-junctions. In cross-junctions, the droplet neck elongates substantially, and unlike the case of the T-junction, the magnitude of this elongation depends strongly on the value of the capillary number. This elongation significantly affects the final droplet volume in a low capillary number regime. Generalizing the classical squeezing law by lifting the original assumptions and incorporating both identified mechanisms of leaking through gutters and neck elongation, we derive a model for droplet formation and show that it agrees with our experiments.

Keywords:
Microfluidics,Cross-junction,Flow-focusing device,Droplet formation,Two-phase flow,Scaling law,Squeezing regime

Affiliations:
Kurniawan T. - IPPT PAN
Sahebdivani M. - other affiliation
Zaremba D. - IPPT PAN
Błoński S. - IPPT PAN
Garstecki P. - Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)
van Steijn V. - Delft University of Technology (NL)
Korczyk P.M. - IPPT PAN
2.  Korczyk P.M., van Steijn V., Błoński S., Zaremba D., Beattie D.A., Garstecki P., Accounting for corner flow unifies the understanding of droplet formation in microfluidic channels, Nature Communications, ISSN: 2041-1723, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10505-5, Vol.10, No.1, pp.2528-1-9, 2019

Abstract:
While shear emulsification is a well understood industrial process, geometrical confinement in microfluidic systems introduces fascinating complexity, so far prohibiting complete understanding of droplet formation. The size of confined droplets is controlled by the ratio between shear and capillary forces when both are of the same order, in a regime known as jetting, while being surprisingly insensitive to this ratio when shear is orders of magnitude smaller than capillary forces, in a regime known as squeezing. Here, we reveal that further reduction of—already negligibly small—shear unexpectedly re-introduces the dependence of droplet size on shear/capillary-force ratio. For the first time we formally account for the flow around forming droplets, to predict and discover experimentally an additional regime—leaking. Our model predicts droplet size and characterizes the transitions from leaking into squeezing and from squeezing into jetting, unifying the description for confined droplet generation, and offering a practical guide for applications.

Affiliations:
Korczyk P.M. - IPPT PAN
van Steijn V. - Delft University of Technology (NL)
Błoński S. - IPPT PAN
Zaremba D. - IPPT PAN
Beattie D.A. - University of South Australia (AU)
Garstecki P. - Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)
3.  van Steijn V., Korczyk P.M., Derzsi L., Abate A.R., Weitz D.A., Garstecki P., Block-and-break generation of microdroplets with fixed volume, BIOMICROFLUIDICS, ISSN: 1932-1058, DOI: 10.1063/1.4801637, Vol.7, pp.024108-1-8, 2013

Abstract:
We introduce a novel type of droplet generator that produces droplets of a volume set by the geometry of the droplet generator and not by the flow rates of the liquids. The generator consists of a classic T-junction with a bypass channel. This bypass directs the continuous fluid around the forming droplets, so that they can fill the space between the inlet of the dispersed phase and the exit of the bypass without breaking. Once filled, the dispersed phase blocks the exit of the bypass and is squeezed by the continuous fluid and broken off from the junction. We demonstrate the fixed-volume droplet generator for (i) the formation of monodisperse droplets from a source of varying flow rates, (ii) the formation of monodisperse droplets containing a gradation of solute concentration, and (iii) the parallel production of monodisperse droplets.

Keywords:
droplet generator, droplets, microfluidics

Affiliations:
van Steijn V. - Delft University of Technology (NL)
Korczyk P.M. - IPPT PAN
Derzsi L. - Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)
Abate A.R. - University of California (US)
Weitz D.A. - Harvard University (US)
Garstecki P. - Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)

Conference abstracts
1.  Korczyk P.M., Van Steijn V., Błoński S., Kowalewski T.A., Garstecki P., Mechanism of generation of droplets in a T-junction for low capillary numbers, XXI FMC, XXI Fluid Mechanics Conference, 2014-06-15/06-18, Kraków (PL), pp.117, 2014

Keywords:
microfluidics, lab on a chip, droplets, T-junction

Affiliations:
Korczyk P.M. - IPPT PAN
Van Steijn V. - Delft University of Technology (NL)
Błoński S. - IPPT PAN
Kowalewski T.A. - IPPT PAN
Garstecki P. - Institute of Physical Chemistry, Polish Academy of Sciences (PL)

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