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Fluidic dielectrophoresis: The polarization and displacement of electrical liquid interfaces
Author(s) -
Mavrogiannis Nicholas,
Desmond Mitchell,
Gag Zachary R.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.201400454
Subject(s) - dielectrophoresis , dielectric , electric field , materials science , polarization (electrochemistry) , polarizability , liquid dielectric , displacement current , fluidics , microfluidics , conductivity , electrophoresis , electrical resistivity and conductivity , electrokinetic phenomena , displacement (psychology) , low frequency , optoelectronics , chemistry , nanotechnology , physics , electrical engineering , chromatography , organic chemistry , engineering , quantum mechanics , astronomy , molecule , psychology , psychotherapist
Traditional particle‐based dielectrophoresis has been exploited to manipulate bubbles, particles, biomolecules, and cells. In this work, we investigate analytically and experimentally how to utilize Maxwell–Wagner polarization to initiate fluidic dielectrophoresis (fDEP) at electrically polarizable aqueous liquid–liquid interfaces. In fDEP, an AC electric field is applied across a liquid electrical interface created between two coflowing fluid streams with different electrical properties. When potentials as low as 2 volts are applied, we observe a frequency‐dependent interfacial displacement that is dependent on the relative differences in the electrical conductivity ( Δ σ ) and dielectric constant ( Δ ɛ ) between the two liquids. At low frequency this deflection is independent of dielectric constant, while at high frequency it is independent of electrical conductivity. At intermediate frequencies, we observe an fDEP cross‐over frequency that is independent of applied voltage, sensitive to both fluid electrical properties, and where no displacement is observed. An analytical fDEP polarization model is presented that accurately predicts the liquid interfacial cross‐over frequency, the dependence of interfacial displacement on liquid electrical conductivity and dielectric constant, and accurately scales the measured fDEP displacement data. The results show that miscible aqueous liquid interfaces are capable of polarizing under AC electric fields, and being precisely deflected in a direction and magnitude that is dependent on the applied electric field frequency.