This application is entitled to the benefit of and incorporates by reference essential subject matter disclosed in International Patent Application No. PCT/DK2005/000775 filed on Dec. 8, 2005 and Danish Patent Application No. PA 2004 01901 filed Dec. 8, 2004.
The present invention relates to mixing of fluids in a micro-flow system, without any risk of bubbles clogging the flow paths and thereby destroying the reliability of the mixing. The mixer comprises transfer conduits like capillary tubes or channels engraved on the surface of a plate. The fluids are merged in a laminated manner. Flow restrictors are inserted into the transfer conduits to ensure stable flow rates, but also possess the ability to segment gas bubbles passing the flow restrictors into sizes unable to clog the flow paths.
Systems with flows in the order of micro-litres per minute are often realized by connecting a source of pressurized liquid to transfer conduits like capillary tubes or channels engraved into the surface of a plate. In the following the transfer conduits shall freely be referred to as channels. This system of channels often comprises changing internal dimensions like a very abrupt narrowing to regulate the flow rates.
It is a known practical problem of such small-scale flow systems, that gas dissolved in a liquid may form into bubbles of gas in the liquid, and such bubbles may have a serious impact on the pressure difference or pressure drop required to drive the fluid at a given flow rate, and in the worst case bubbles may lead to an effective blocking of the channels. This is due to the phenomenon of fragmentation of a (larger) bubble into a plurality of small bubbles within the channel, a phenomenon being especially pronounced at the inlet of an internal narrowing of the channel.
Plugs of liquid separate the small bubbles from each other, and each small bubble requires a certain pressure difference between its ends to move along the channel. That pressure difference is largely independent of bubble length. Bubbles shorter than a critical length have a tendency to situate themselves into the channels thereby blocking the flow. This critical length depends on elements like the viscosity of the liquid, the dimensions of the channels and of the flow.
Whether actual clogging will occur depends, of course, on the pressure margin, which is available for driving the flow. Clogging will occur only if the total pressure differential between the source and the recipient is consumed by the sum of pressure drops from a train of bubbles and liquid plugs.
For many applications it is desirable to mix fluids in the system. This would be the case when a reagent fluid is added to give some change indicative of the concentration of some species in the fluid, like a shift in colour detectable by an optical apparatus. One application is to analyse for glucose in human tissue for diabetics, where it may be a matter of life and death to give a fast and reliable measurement.
Therefore, a number of micro-mixers has been suggested based on lamination of the fluids to enhance the mixing by diffusion, like adding a first fluid to the second from the top and the bottom letting the diffusion occur across two contact areas, or the more complicated lamination described in DE 195 36 856, where the fluids are cut into a plural of small sections.
Such mixing by lamination may suffer severely if a bubble places itself so as to restrict the flow of one of the fluids, thereby changing the relative flow rates of the fluids. This would lead to a reduced mixing efficiency of the fluids, possibly mixing the fluids in the wrong relative quantities.
To minimize the effect of the bubbles on the flow rates in general microflow-systems one can insert flow restrictors of a substantially large resistance, making the relative effect of a bubble less pronounced. They may be chosen as small pieces of glass capillary tubes with a smaller internal diameter than the channels. The flow rates in capillary tubes have a well-defined relation to the length and diameter of the capillary, and to the pressure drop along the inside of the capillary. For a given pressure drop the flow rate may thus be fixed at a desired value by choosing a capillary of suitable length and diameter. A disadvantage of this practice is that such flow restrictors themselves tend to fragment the bubble, each fragmented bubble adding to the total flow resistance.
This invention relates to simple mixing by laminating layers of fluids together, where a first fluid is merged to a second fluid from two sides, leading to a laminated flow structure of the fluids, a lamination process that may naturally be repeated to increase the number of laminated layers of fluids. The laminated fluids then follow a channel section of such a length, that diffusion ensures a sufficient mixing of the fluids, at least in the ideal situation.
However, if the fluids contain bubbles the flow rates may be affected as described previously, in a way that makes the mixing unpredictable and unreliable.
Based on this, it has now been found that, by suitably widening the inlet of the flow channel dependent on the desired flow rate, it is possible to control the timing of perturbation growth of the liquid film around gas bubbles in the channel, in such a manner that any bubble fragmentation is controlled to bubble lengths only longer than the critical length and thus posing no risk of blocking the capillary.
The objective of this invention is to create a reliable micro-mixer, where the fluids are laminated and mixed by simple diffusion, without the drawbacks of bubbles affecting the flow rates and thereby the laminations and the mixing.
This is achieved by a device for mixing at least one first fluid and one second fluid in a micro-flow system, comprising
at least two flow restrictors
a first transfer conduit in fluid communication the first og said fluids and a recipient,
at least one second transfer conduit in fluid communication with the second of said fluids, the second transfer conduit having at least two fluid outlets in fluid communication with said first transfer conduit,
where each of said outlets of said second transfer conduit is downstream and in fluid communication with the outlet of one of said flow restrictors, and wherein the flow restrictors are bubble-tolerant, being formed to prevent fragmentation of bubbles entering the flow restrictor, into a bubble train consuming the pressure difference between the source and the recipient.
Pumping means may be attached to the flow system, possibly being constant-pressure pumps of the kind, where elastomer bladders squeeze a fluid into the channels.
A second channel 101 is communicating a second fluid from the reservoir 106, reservoir 106 in the preferred embodiment of the invention being identical to the reservoir 105, but this is not essential to the invention.
The first channel 100 is split at the point 102 into the branches 100a and 100b merging with the second channel 101 at a merging point 103 from the left and the right sides, respectively. The pressure drops by a factor DP=P102-P103, where P102 is the pressure in channel 100 just before the point of branching point 102, and P103 is the pressure in channel 101 just after the merging 103.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, each of the two channels 100a, 100b has the same internal flow resistance R, and with the same drop in pressure DP, the flow rates are identical in the two channels 100a and 100b, so that Q100a/Q100b=1, where Q100a and Q100b are the flow rates in channels 100a and 100b respectively, being Q100a=DP/R=Q100b.
When a bubble 104 enters, for example the channel 100a, the resistance is affected by the perturbation DR lowering the flow rate Q100a,DR=DP/(R+DR), so that Q100a/Q100b=R/(R+DR)<1, since the perturbation DR is positive. Keeping constant flow conditions may often be vital when mixing fluids in analysis-systems, since, as described, bubbles of gas may have a predominant effect on the flow rates, when the internal resistance R is relatively small, but such fluctuations could be minimized by inserting substantially larger flow restrictors into the flow channels. If the perturbation is small compared to the resistance R, the relation Q100a,DR/Q100b approaches 1 since the two flow rates Q100a and Q100b becomes almost identical.
However, it is a well known phenomenon in the field of micro fluid systems with laminar flow that a structural change of the flow communicating means may lead to the formation or fragmentation of air-bubbles into sizes, where they will possibly clog the system.
The liquid 2 may contain bubbles of gas 8. The bubble 8 is shown as being driven into the inlet 4 of the channel section 3 by the pressure difference between source and recipient. Often the presence of the bubble causes two-phase flow at the channel inlet 4. Liquid flows in a thin layer 9, which adheres to the inner surface of the channel 3. The liquid layer 9 coaxially surrounds a flow 10 of gas, which fills the remaining core of the channel 3.
The two-phase flow in the flow channel 3 exhibits a phenomenon of instability, which frequently leads to fragmentation of the gas flow into separate bubbles 11 of gas, separated by plugs 12 of liquid. This is due to the surface tension of the liquid-gas interface of the film 9. The surface tension causes a tendency of the liquid film to reduce its surface and may grow until a bubble is pinched off as indicated at 13 and 14. Such fragmentation is frequently observed, although in practice its onset has turned out to be largely unpredictable.
When sections of capillary tubes are inserted into the channels as flow restrictors, there will be a narrowing as illustrated on
For relatively large flows, more than a few micro-litres per minute, it is often sufficient to mix two fluids by simple diffusion, where the intermixing is often helped by a relative turbulent nature of the flows will exist post to the joining. In micro-system however, the conditions often are for the flows to be laminar, without such turbulent behaviour. So when the two flows 30,31 meet as illustrated on
Investigation has shown, however, that the flow restrictor geometry may be modified to suppress the generation of bubbles below critical length. Shown in
A first rule for the widening of the channel 3 may be derived from the condition that the inlet geometry should at least allow the formation of bubbles long enough to avoid blocking of the channel 3. Letting N denote the number of bubbles present in the flow restrictor, flow will not be blocked if
NΔPd<ÄP
wherein ΔPd denotes the deformation pressure drop of each bubble as defined in (3) above. Considering the pinch-off of a bubble in the widened part of the flow channel 3 at a point where the channel has an internal diameter D*>D, it has been calculated, that if
and if the inlet of the channel 3 is widened to a diameter slightly above D*, this at least creates the possibility that bubbles produced by fragmentation will be long enough to not completely stop the flow through the channel, even if the channel is filled up completely by such bubbles. In the equation Q is the flow rate of liquid through the channel 3, η is the viscosity of the liquid and α is a frictional surface tension parameter, which must be established empirically.
Turning now to the fragmentation process itself,
Investigations indicate that it is largely a matter of local surface curvature and timing, whether pinch-off will actually occur or not. If the bubble 16 passes a site 25 of beginning local accumulation of liquid but the liquid film 17, however, not reach sufficient thickness to form a liquid plug while the bubble passes, pinch-off will not happen. On the other hand, if the liquid film 17 grows thick enough to coalesce at the centre of the channel 3 to form a liquid plug, while the bubble 16 flows past the site 25, pinch-off will be the result.
Based on this, it has now been found that by suitably widening the inlet of the flow channel dependent on the desired flow rate, it is possible to control the timing of perturbation growth of the liquid film around gas bubbles in the channel 3 in such a manner that any bubble fragmentation will lead to bubbles, which are either longer than the limiting length of equation 6, thus posing no risk of blocking the capillary, or short enough to reduce the flow, but not numerous enough to stop the flow of liquid through the capillary.
It is calculated that bubbles shorter than a limiting bubble length Lbl,
where ηg is the viscosity of the gas, lead to a risk of clogging the flow channel because the gain from lower viscosity of the gas is offset by the loss due to deformation; bubbles longer than Lbl will flow freely along the flow channel because the gain from lower viscosity of the gas dominates.
It has been found that within the tapered channel portion, instabilities will typically cause a liquid film to coalesce at the centre of the flow channel, and thereby to pinch off a bubble, and investigations indicate that the smallest of these local time periods, referred to as τ*, governs the time scale of bubble segmentation within the widened part of the channel 3.
It is desired to prevent bubble fragmentation into bubbles shorter than the limiting bubble length Lbl, and the characteristic (minimum) transit time τbl of such bubbles is
where v* is characteristic (maximum) value of bubble velocity at some coordinate z along the channel 3 where the internal diameter is at its minimum. A channel slope designed such that
will prevent the formation of bubbles having a length Lb<Lbl.
Relations (1) and (2) may then be combined in the design of the widened inlet to the channel 3 to form a flow restrictor which is tolerant to bubble fragmentation, as follows:
In a first section of the channel 3 between the inlet face 7 and a first z-coordinate z1, the channel diameter D should be kept larger than the value D* given by relation (1) above. In this connection, the coordinate z1 is defined as the first location along the channel where the channel diameter narrows down to D*. This will ensure that any bubble segmentation within the first section does not generate bubbles, which are so short as to block the flow completely.
In a second section of the channel, between the first z-coordinate z1 and a second z-coordinate z2, the channel should be designed to narrow down gradually towards the original channel diameter D in accordance with the relation (2) above. The second z-coordinate z2 is defined as the first location along the channel, where the channel narrows down to its original, overall diameter D. In practical terms this means that the geometry should be designed to minimize the change in surface curvature as the channel narrows down. This will ensure that bubbles which have reached z1 unfragmented, or which have been fragmented at z1 into bubbles of non-critical length, will not be further fragmented during their passage along the second channel section, and will enter into the remaining, straight section of channel 3 unfragmented and remain unfragmented also there.
While the present invention has been illustrated and described with respect to a particular embodiment thereof, it should be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications to this invention may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PA 200401901 | Dec 2004 | DK | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DK05/00775 | 12/8/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/5/2007 |