Purpose
The purpose of this study is to introduce an alternative construction for microfluidic micromixers, where the effect of the extruded filaments in the fused deposition modeling (FDM) technique is used to enhance mixing performance identified as a challenge in microfluidic micromixers.
Design/methodology/approach
A simple Y-shaped micromixer was designed and printed using FDM technique. Experimental and numerical studies were conducted to investigate the effect of the extruded filaments on the flow behavior. The effects of the extruded width (LW), distance between adjacent filaments (b) and filament height (h1) are investigated on the mixing performance and enhancing mixing in the fabricated devices. The performance of fabricated devices in mixing two solutions was tested at flow rates of 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 and 150 µL/min.
Findings
The experimental results showed that the presence of geometrical features on microchannels, because of the nature of the FDM process, can act as ridges and generate a lateral transform through the transverse movement of fluids along the groove. The results showed the effect of increasing ridge height on the transverse movement of the fluids and, therefore, chaotic mixing over the ridges. In contrast, in the shallow ridge, diffusion is the only mechanism for mixing, which confirms the numerical results.
Originality/value
The study presents an exciting aspect of FDM for fabrication of micromixers and enhance mixing process. In comparison to other methods, no complexity was added in fabrication process and the ridges are an inherent property of the FDM process.
Recent developments in additive manufacturing have moved towards a new trend in material extrusion processes (ISO/ASTM 52910:2018), dealing with the direct extrusion of thermoplastic and composite material from pellets. This growing interest is driven by the reduction of costs, environmental impact, energy consumption, and the possibility to increase the range of printable materials. Pellet additive manufacturing (PAM) can cover the same applications as fused filament fabrication (FFF), and in addition, can lead to scale towards larger workspaces that cannot be covered by FFF, due to the limited diameters of standard filaments. In the first case, the process is known as micro- or mini-extrusion (MiE) in the literature, in the second case the expression big area additive manufacturing (BAAM) is very common. Several models are available in literature regarding filament extrusion, while there is a lack of modeling of the extrusion dynamics in PAM. Physical and chemical phenomena involved in PAM have high overlap with those characterizing injection molding (IM). Therefore, a systematic study of IM literature can lead to a selection of the most promising models for PAM, both for lower (MiE) and larger (BAAM) extruder dimensions. The models concerning the IM process have been reviewed with this aim: the extraction of information useful for the development of codes able to predict thermo-fluid dynamics performances of PAM extruders.
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