Modeling of microdevices for SAW-based acoustophoresis-A study of boundary conditions

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Abstract

We present a finite-element method modeling of acoustophoretic devices consisting of a single, long, straight, water-filled microchannel surrounded by an elastic wall of either borosilicate glass (pyrex) or the elastomer polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and placed on top of a piezoelectric transducer that actuates the device by surface acoustic waves (SAW). We compare the resulting acoustic fields in these full solid-fluid models with those obtained in reduced fluid models comprising of only a water domain with simplified, approximate boundary conditions representing the surrounding solids. The reduced models are found to only approximate the acoustically hard pyrex systems to a limited degree for large wall thicknesses and but not very well for acoustically soft PDMS systems shorter than the PDMS damping length of 3 mm.

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Skov, N. R., & Bruus, H. (2016). Modeling of microdevices for SAW-based acoustophoresis-A study of boundary conditions. Micromachines, 7(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/mi7100182

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