Symmetry-Protected Stressless Microfluidics

ORAL

Abstract

Flows under spatial confinement have often been regarded as possessing nonuniform structures accompanied by deformations and rotations. Symmetries of the system can however provide a powerful tool to both understand and manipulate the structure of the flow. Here, we studied flows confined by three-dimensional (3D) microfluidic devices with polyhedral symmetries. We show that all characteristic flows following an Octahedral symmetry can be classified into strain-full and strain-free groups, corresponding to distinct subgroups of the Octahedral symmetry group. Interestingly, the strain-free group of flow modes corresponds to uniform flow in arbitrary directions, which suggest exploiting them for 3D stress-free manipulations of flows. To demonstrate the robustness of these symmetry-protected flows, we built a microfluidic device with these symmetries and successfully realized stress-free manipulations by entraining several microparticles in the bulk fluid and forcing them to follow a variety of parallel and identical, user-specified 3D paths.

*This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant CBET-2046822, NSF-CREST: Center for Cellular and Bio-molecular Machines (CCBM) at UC Merced (HRD-1547848), and Department of Defense DURIP ARO No.73839-MA-RIP.

Presenters

  • Jeremias M Gonzalez

    • University of California, Merced

Authors

  • Jeremias M Gonzalez

    • University of California, Merced
  • Ajay Gopinathan

    • University of California Merced
  • Bin Liu

    • University of California, Merced