This application relates generally to fluid flow devices. More particularly, the application relates to devices and methods of manufacturing high-throughput fluid micro-mixers and micro-reactors having micro-channels for mixing of reactants with different viscosities, mixing immiscible liquids, gas-liquid mixing, and controlled incremental introduction of limiting reagents.
Micro-fluid processing is a rapidly evolving area in research and industry. The need for control over biochemical and chemical reactions is useful for reducing reagent waste and minimizing sample sizes, in addition to reducing exposure risks that may be associated with working with certain hazardous chemicals.
In the past, molding and lithography techniques have been used to construct planar micro-fluid devices out of pliable materials such as flexible polymers and the like. Though these materials are useful for single-layer mixing devices, the process times and workspace requirements for handling large volumes of reagents, for example, can become very large, which makes processing such devices both difficult and expensive.
In one embodiment, devices and methods are provided for mixing reactants with different viscosities, mixing immiscible liquids, gas-liquids mixing, and controlled incremental introduction of limiting reagents. The devices and methods can include micro-mixers and micro-reactors arrays having micro-channels for mixing the reactants.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the disclosed embodiments will become more apparent from the following detailed description, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying figures.
Interdigital Micro-Mixer
This interdigital micro-mixer is created by stacking patterned laminae. Fluid streams are channeled so that very thin fluid layers are interleaved, resulting in very short paths for diffusion of one fluid into the other (and therefore, rapid mixing).
This design can accommodate mixing of any number of streams as well as sequential or staged mixing.
Fabrication techniques used thus far include diffusion bonding (using a vacuum hot press) and wire EDM for separating the individual parts from the array. Layout conventions from the integrated circuit industry have been used to achieve high separation ratios, as well as to create a volume throughput device (see disclosure with OSU docket number 07-32 below). The high separation ratio concept allows lower aspect ratio spans between channel (width vs. thickness of span) to be used and still achieve high volumetric throughput. Lower aspect ratio spans are easier to manufacture, as demonstrated in
The device in the
The device in
Because the mixing time is an inverse function of the square of the thickness of the fluid laminae created by the interdigital micro-mixer, it is desirable to make these as thin as possible. To do so also requires thin spans between the fluid laminae. Thus, to achieve the highest degree of mixing the approach presented here is to reduce the aspect ratio in individual devices to dimensions that are robust in manufacturing, then array them densely to create a highly parallel system capable of high throughput. Example architectures to create such arrays are discussed in more detail below and in U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/995,329, which is incorporated herein by reference. Further development activities include making devices in polymeric materials, reducing the cost of welding the tubing on the stainless steel devices (through fixturing or alternate welding techniques), reducing bonding costs per part through alternative techniques or increasing the separation ratio of the platform.
One example of a polymeric device currently being developed is made by embossing polycarbonate using a diffusion bonded structure as the embossing master. A double transfer embossing process, developed in the MBI, is used to make the final parts.
Another embodiment (shown in
A composite structure has also been designed. The interdigital mixing portion is created in metal, taking advantage of the material strength to create the thin laminae. The mixer is then fitted into a polymer housing providing the fluidic connections. One concept for sealing the metal to polymer interfaces is to use infrared radiation. Polymers can be transparent to radiation, while metals will absorb the energy, heating it, and creating localized melting of the polymer at the metal surfaces. By reducing the metal portion to such a small size, very high separation ratios can be achieved (>10 times of a full metal device) and, thus, low cost. The polymer portion can be injection molded as two halves and include integrated fittings or screw threads. Accordingly, a low cost device (<$5 manufacturing cost) can be achieved compared to currently available commercial devices (retail costs from $125 to over $2000).
The construction of devices describe below preferably comprise embossed polymer devices and composite metal and polymer structures.
Interdigital Micro-Mixer Column
A key advantage of microchannel technology is the reduction of fluid layer thicknesses to reduce diffusion limitations. This design re-divides the mixed fluids to thin layers again, effectively creating mixing stages in a column. This design also has improved heat transfer with the mixed fluid stream.
COMSOL plots comparing the concentration profiles for the standard interdigital micro-mixer and the column micro-mixer, thereby demonstrating mixing efficiencies, are shown in
A long column design is shown in the
If desired an unequal flow ratio device for diluting a concentrate, multistage designs for multiple operations, polymer and composite constructions, and testing devices can be configured for specific applications.
An example planar design can be fabricated (using both SU-8 molding and a triple transfer embossing technique) as shown in
Microscale Reactor
This design is a microscale reactor that enables applications including mixing of reactants with different viscosities, mixing immiscible liquids (for either liquid-liquid reactions or creating emulsions), gas-liquid mixing, and controlled incremental introduction of limiting reagents. The design shown in
A schematic cross section view of the fluid flow is shown in
Desirably, the embodiment shown in
Development for the microscale reactor can include graduated introduction designs for specific applications and multistage devices. Additionally, designs to reduce manufacturing costs by using polymers and higher device densities can be utilized.
Architecture for Fluidic Interconnections for Arrays of Interdigital Micro-Mixers
This architecture provides fluidic connections to many individual devices placed in a dense array. This allows predictable scaling from an individual device of both performance and manufacturing. This architecture shown in
Further development of the arrayed architecture includes increasing the density of devices, simplifying the plate stack, and constructing devices in polymer material.
Integrated Micro-Mixer and Jetting Device
This device combines the interdigital mixing device with active fluid drivers to create a drop-on-demand chemical deposition device. Mixing or reacting chemical streams just prior to ejection allows deposition of short-lived or unstable reaction products (for example, silver nanoparticles).
More mature designs include designed bores for droplet size control and a design where the streams merge at the nozzle exit (mixing occurs in the droplet in flight and on the substrate after deposition). Examples of these are discussed below.
Future developments can include prototyping of externally driven devices. For example, integrated pulse drivers can be utilized. Externally driven devices can include nozzle bore, reaction chamber characterization, “mix in flight” designs, and composite polymer and metal constructions.
Nanoparticle Generator
This device is an integration of an interdigital micro-mixer with an internal nozzle array. Reactant or emulsion fluid droplets are pulsed from the nozzles into excess reactant or continuous phase stream using a driver such as a piezo micropump. The driver may be integrated into the device or external to the device. This device can be used to generate nanoparticles, emulsions, or controlled reactions of immiscible reactants by jetting small (picoliter) reactant droplets into a fluid or reactant in excess. By creating a stream of consistently sized droplets, continuous, precision methods for making nanoparticles and microemulsions can be realized. The device can include subsequent micromixing stages to quench reactions, or complete additional reaction steps. The device architecture lends itself to multiple reaction stages within one small device. For example, precursor reactants may be mixed prior to jetting into subsequent fluid streams.
A single layer device has been created using soft lithography, the details of which are shown in
An alternate design that is amenable to creating a dense array of nozzles in a planar device is shown in
A dual layer device using a thin kapton piece sandwiched between PDMS layers. A laser cut in the kapton creates the nozzle (see
This design has also been applied to metal laminae construction as shown in
Development of this device can be performed in multiple stages. First, fluid flow can be characterized using non-reactive systems. Second, specific reaction chemistries can be developed with the design being refined as needed for each specific application. In addition, a full system for precision deposition of nanomaterials can be constructed.
Mixing Chamber Flow Paths with Multiple Mixing Chambers
A COMSOL concentration plot of the apparatus illustrates that the separation and recombination of the mixing chamber flow path (as shown in
A COMSOL concentration plot of the apparatus illustrates that the repeated separation and recombination of the mixing chamber flow path (as shown in
Mixing quality of such integrated systems is very high. For example, mixing efficiency at the outlet of each mixer is ≦0.0001, as calculated by surface integration of outlet concentration variation (c−c0/2)^2 divided by average inlet concentration. In addition, at 5 psi driving pressure, flow through the 4× array (
In some embodiments, the devices described herein can be combined to provide two or more different stages.
In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the disclosed invention may be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are only preferred examples of the invention and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims. I therefore claim as my invention all that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
This application claims the benefit of the earlier filing date of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/640,599, filed on Apr. 30, 2012, which is incorporated herein by reference.
This invention was made with government support under contract number FA8650-05-1-5041 awarded by AFRL/IF—Air Force Research Laboratory. The government has certain rights in the invention.
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