0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

Influence of electrode reactions on electroosmotic flow and ion transport in a microchannel

Research Square (Research Square) 2023 Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Runze Sun, Chicheng Ma, Bader Al-Anzi, Emilie Sauret, Yuantong Gu, Zirui Li

Summary

Researchers modeled how electrode reactions influence electroosmotic flow and ion transport in microfluidic channels. The study found that ignoring electrode effects leads to inaccurate predictions of fluid behavior in electrically driven microdevices. These insights improve the design of lab-on-chip systems used in analytical chemistry and biosensing.

Abstract Electroosmotic flow (EOF) is a universal phenomenon in most microfluidic systems when an external electric field exists along charged channel walls. The mechanism of ion transport and fluid flow in such systems has been extensively studied, largely based on simplified models without consideration of electrode reactions and water dissociation. In order to study the effects of these electrochemical reactions, we build an electrokinetic model with full consideration of these processes, namely electrochemistry (EC) model, and compare its performance with that of the traditional electrokinetic (EK) model. Our results show that electrode reactions alter the electric potential and reduce the current, causing a significant reduction in EOF velocity. These potential changes and EOF reduction are driven almost entirely by electrode reactions because the difference between the results from the EC model and those from the EK model with potential adjustment induced by chemical reactions is slight. In addition, the participation of ions in electrode reactions leads to notable alterations in their concentration within the microchannel and significant pH change, which are totally ignored in the traditional EK model. It is found that at a typical applied electric field of 50 V/cm, the EOF velocity in the EC model is 64% of that in the EK model. This difference in velocity decreases to only 1.9% as the EK model considers electric potential shifts caused by electrode reactions. In the microchannel, the Cl − concentration drops by approximately 50% while the OH − increases, leading to a pH growth of 3.5. The results presented in this work can improve the understanding of electrode effects on the physicochemical properties of EOF systems, providing essential guidance for manipulating fluid flow and amphoteric molecular transport in various microfluidic systems.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Microplastic separation and enrichment in microchannels under derivative electric field gradient by bipolar electrode reactions

Researchers used microfluidic channels equipped with bipolar electrodes to create electric field gradients that efficiently separate and concentrate microplastic particles from water at the microscale. Computer simulations optimized the channel design and voltage settings, offering a potential precision tool for removing microplastics from aquatic environments.

Article Tier 2

Electrochemically generated ion depletion zones for continuous separations in microelectrochemical devices

Researchers developed an electrochemical microfluidic device that uses ion depletion zones to separate chemical mixtures with lower energy consumption than conventional techniques. While focused on chemical separation technology, this type of device has potential applications in environmental sample analysis including microplastic detection.

Article Tier 2

Mathematical Modeling of Transport Phenomena in Electroosmotic Fluid Flow for Heat and Mass Transfer of Microplastics in a Renewable Energy-Powered Filtration System

Researchers developed a mathematical model for the transport of microplastic particles in an electroosmotic filtration system powered by renewable energy. The model incorporates fluid dynamics, electrokinetics, and thermal gradients to predict microplastic behavior in microchannel filtration. The study provides insights into optimizing microplastic separation efficiency under varying electric field intensities and temperature conditions.

Article Tier 2

Modelling of Diffusiophoretic Motion for Microplastic Filtration in Microchannel Flows.

Researchers developed microchannel designs that harness diffusiophoresis -- particle motion driven by electrolyte solute gradients in a cross-flow orientation -- to filter micrometer-sized particles such as microplastics from water. The modeling study demonstrates the potential of this mechanism to enable low-cost, decentralized water filtration without energy-intensive pressure-driven systems.

Article Tier 2

Microfluidic system for efficient molecular delivery to artificial cell membranes

A novel microfluidic chip design was developed that forms stable lipid bilayer membranes and allows buffer replacement without membrane disruption, enabling precise study of drug-membrane interactions at the cell scale—advancing in vitro platforms for pharmaceutical screening.

Share this paper