A novel, passive, scaled-up micromixer based on fluid rotation is proposed and evaluated experimentally and numerically over Reynolds numbers ranging from 0.5 to 100. Flow visualization is employed to qualitatively assess flow patterns, while induced fluorescence is used to quantify species distribution at five locations along the channel length. Two individual fluids are supplied to the test section via a Y-inlet. The fluid enters a meandering channel with four semicircular portions, each of which is lined with nine slanted grooves at the bottom surface. The main mixing channel is 3 mm wide and 0.75 mm deep, with a total length of 155.8 mm. Numerical simulations confirm rotation at all investigated Reynolds numbers, and the strength of rotation increases with increasing Reynolds number. Grooves are employed to promote helical flow, while the serpentine channel structure results in the formation of Dean vortices at Re ≥ 50 (Dean number ≥ 18.25), where momentum has a more significant effect. A decreasing-increasing trend in the degree of mixing was noted, with an inflection point at Re = 5, marking the transition from diffusion dominance to advection dominance. The increase in interfacial surface area is credited with the improved mixing in the advection-dominant regime, while high residence time allowed for significant mass diffusion in the diffusion-dominant regime. Good mixing was achieved at both high and low Reynolds numbers, with a maximum mixing index of 0.90 at Re = 100.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
August 2013
Research-Article
Mixing Evaluation of a Passive Scaled-Up Serpentine Micromixer With Slanted Grooves
Ibrahim Hassan
Ibrahim Hassan
1
e-mail: ibrahimh@alcor.concordia.ca
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering,
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering,
Concordia University
,Montreal, QC H3G 2W1
, Canada
1Corresponding author.
Search for other works by this author on:
Ibrahim Hassan
e-mail: ibrahimh@alcor.concordia.ca
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering,
Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering,
Concordia University
,Montreal, QC H3G 2W1
, Canada
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Fluids Engineering Division of ASME for publication in the JOURNAL OF FLUIDS ENGINEERING. Manuscript received April 8, 2012; final manuscript received April 3, 2013; published online June 3, 2013. Assoc. Editor: Michael G. Olsen.
J. Fluids Eng. Aug 2013, 135(8): 081102 (12 pages)
Published Online: June 3, 2013
Article history
Received:
April 8, 2012
Revision Received:
April 3, 2013
Citation
Cook, K. J., Fan, Y., and Hassan, I. (June 3, 2013). "Mixing Evaluation of a Passive Scaled-Up Serpentine Micromixer With Slanted Grooves." ASME. J. Fluids Eng. August 2013; 135(8): 081102. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4024146
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Experimental Investigation of the Effect of Rake on a Bluff Body Equipped With a Diffuser
J. Fluids Eng (April 2025)
Related Articles
Experimental and Numerical Evaluation of a Scaled-Up Micromixer With Groove Enhanced Division Elements
J. Fluids Eng (January,2013)
Mixing and Heat Transfer Enhancement in Microchannels Containing Converging-Diverging Passages
J. Heat Transfer (April,2014)
Confined Swirling Flows of Aqueous Surfactant Solutions Due to a Rotating Disk in a Cylindrical Casing
J. Fluids Eng (August,2008)
Numerical Analysis of Unsteady Flow in the Weis-Fogh Mechanism by the 3D Discrete Vortex Method With GRAPE3A
J. Fluids Eng (March,1997)
Related Proceedings Papers
Related Chapters
Numerical Simulations of Tip Leakage Vortex Cavitation Flows Around a NACA0009 Hydrofoil
Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Cavitation (CAV2018)
Assessment of Remote Cavitation Detection Methods with Flow Visualization in a Full Scale Francis Turbine
Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Cavitation (CAV2018)
In-Nozzle Flow Visualization of Marine Diesel Injector Nozzles with Different Inlet Radii
Proceedings of the 10th International Symposium on Cavitation (CAV2018)