Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications

Bio-printing is now facing a big challenge of cell viability with using extrusion based printing or jetting based printing principles. One of the causes is due to the high shear stress and pressure gradient of cell included flows. Digital microfluidics which was activated by electrowetting on dielec...

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Main Authors: Vo, Xuan-Quoc, Tran, Tuan
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84396
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41763
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-843962020-09-24T20:12:31Z Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications Vo, Xuan-Quoc Tran, Tuan School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2016) Singapore Centre for 3D Printing Electrowetting on Dielectrics Spreading dynamics Bio-printing is now facing a big challenge of cell viability with using extrusion based printing or jetting based printing principles. One of the causes is due to the high shear stress and pressure gradient of cell included flows. Digital microfluidics which was activated by electrowetting on dielectrics (EWOD) principles involved potential advantages such as low shear stress induced and high speed activation promisingly overcomes this challenge. Although much efforts has been devoted to understand the phenomenon physically as well as to apply it to activating droplets, there is no complete study about the transient state of EWOD from which it can be used for supporting EWOD based droplet activated system design. This paper will systematically introduce several physical aspects of transient EWOD including dependence of response speed on viscosity and drop’s volume. The results showed that the response speed of droplets strongly depends on drop’s viscosity and size. It also revealed the existence of a critical point of liquid viscosity where the behavior of droplet changes from underdamped to overdamped regimes. Published version 2016-12-08T08:28:08Z 2019-12-06T15:44:18Z 2016-12-08T08:28:08Z 2019-12-06T15:44:18Z 2016 Conference Paper Vo, X.-Q., & Tran, T. (2016). Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications. Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Progress in Additive Manufacturing (Pro-AM 2016), 228-233. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84396 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41763 en © 2016 by Pro-AM 2016 Organizers. Published by Research Publishing, Singapore 6 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Electrowetting on Dielectrics
Spreading dynamics
spellingShingle Electrowetting on Dielectrics
Spreading dynamics
Vo, Xuan-Quoc
Tran, Tuan
Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
description Bio-printing is now facing a big challenge of cell viability with using extrusion based printing or jetting based printing principles. One of the causes is due to the high shear stress and pressure gradient of cell included flows. Digital microfluidics which was activated by electrowetting on dielectrics (EWOD) principles involved potential advantages such as low shear stress induced and high speed activation promisingly overcomes this challenge. Although much efforts has been devoted to understand the phenomenon physically as well as to apply it to activating droplets, there is no complete study about the transient state of EWOD from which it can be used for supporting EWOD based droplet activated system design. This paper will systematically introduce several physical aspects of transient EWOD including dependence of response speed on viscosity and drop’s volume. The results showed that the response speed of droplets strongly depends on drop’s viscosity and size. It also revealed the existence of a critical point of liquid viscosity where the behavior of droplet changes from underdamped to overdamped regimes.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Vo, Xuan-Quoc
Tran, Tuan
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Vo, Xuan-Quoc
Tran, Tuan
author_sort Vo, Xuan-Quoc
title Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
title_short Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
title_full Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
title_fullStr Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
title_full_unstemmed Transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
title_sort transient electrowetting on dielectric for activating droplets in bioprinting applications
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/84396
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/41763
_version_ 1681057863522320384