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      Prediction of Microdroplet Breakup Regime in Asymmetric T-Junction Microchannels.

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          Abstract

          Splitting droplets is becoming a major functional component in increasing number of droplet microfluidic applications, and there is an increasing interest in splitting droplets into two daughter droplets with different volumes. However, designing an asymmetric droplet splitter and predicting how a droplet splits in such designs is not trivial. In this study, numerical simulations were conducted to study droplet breakup in asymmetric T-junctions of square cross-sections having different pressure gradient ratios (i.e. T-junctions with outlet branches of different lengths). The goal of the simulation is to identify the conditions where a parent droplet breaks or does not break into two smaller droplets of different sizes (so called critical condition) and to identify the important fluid and microchannel parameters in this process. Four modes of droplet breakup (primary-, transition-, bubble-, and non-breakups) are identified and an empirical correlation is introduced that can predict the breakup/non-breakup of the droplet based on the parent droplet size and the capillary number. The simulation results are then compared with experimental data to verify its accuracy and the effect of fluids properties on the proposed correlation are studied. Two major asymmetric breakup mechanisms are determined, namely "breakup with permanent obstruction" and "unstable breakup". The numerical results show that the splitting ratio for the asymmetric breakup mechanisms depends on flow conditions and dwell time of the droplet at the junction prior to splitting. Finally, the results from two-dimensional and three-dimensional simulations were compared. It is shown that two-dimensional simulation may not accurately predict the breakup behavior for asymmetric droplet breakup and viscosity ration has a greater effect on the prediction critical condition.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Biomed Microdevices
          Biomedical microdevices
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1572-8781
          1387-2176
          August 13 2018
          : 20
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Texas A&M University at Qatar, Doha, Qatar.
          [2 ] Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA. reza.sadr@tamu.edu.
          [3 ] Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA.
          Article
          10.1007/s10544-018-0310-8
          10.1007/s10544-018-0310-8
          30105562
          6b8c82b5-288f-4cf5-b84b-a7a933099b03
          History

          Asymmetric T-junction,Breakup,Computational fluid dynamics (CFD),Criteria,Droplet split

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