Journal article

Microfluidic acoustic sawtooth metasurfaces for patterning and separation using traveling surface acoustic waves

M Xu, PVS Lee, DJ Collins

Lab on A Chip | ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY | Published : 2022

Abstract

We demonstrate a sawtooth-based metasurface approach for flexibly orienting acoustic fields in a microfluidic device driven by surface acoustic waves (SAW), where sub-wavelength channel features can be used to arbitrarily steer acoustic fringes in a microchannel. Compared to other acoustofluidic methods, only a single travelling wave is used, the fluidic pressure field is decoupled from the fluid domain's shape, and steerable pressure fields are a function of a simply constructed polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) metasurface shape. Our results are relevant to microfluidic applications including the patterning, concentration, focusing, and separation of microparticles and cells.

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was performed in part at the Melbourne Centre for Nanofabrication (MCN) in the Victorian Node of the Australian National Fabrication Facility (ANFF). Dr. Collins is the recipient of a Discovery Early Career Researcher Award from the Australian Research Council (DECRA, DE200100909), and funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council (Ideas, APP2003446).