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ME 381R Fall Lecture 24:

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A particle image velocimetry system for microfluidics, Santiago, J.G et al. ... J.I. Molho, A.E. Herr, T.W. Kenny, M.G. Mungal, P.M. St.John, M.G. Garguilo, P.H. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ME 381R Fall Lecture 24:


1
ME 381R Fall Lecture 24 Micro-Nano Scale
Thermal-Fluid Measurement Techniques
Dr. Li Shi Department of Mechanical Engineering
The University of Texas at Austin Austin, TX
78712 www.me.utexas.edu/lishi lishi_at_mail.utexas.
edu
2
Visualization of Microflows
  • Caged fluorescence
  • Micro Particle Image Velocimetry (mPIV)
  • References
  • A particle image velocimetry system for
    microfluidics, Santiago, J.G et al. Experiments
    in Fluids, 25, pp. 316-319. (1998)
  • 2. PIV measurements of a microchannel flow,
    Meinhart et al. Experiments in Fluids, 27, pp.
    414-419 (1999)
  • 3. J.I. Molho, A.E. Herr, T.W. Kenny, M.G.
    Mungal, P.M. St.John, M.G. Garguilo, P.H . Paul,
    M. Deshpande, and J.R. Gilbert, "Fluid Transport
    Mechanisms in Microflui dic Devices",
    Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS), 1998
    ASME International Mechanical Engineering
    Congress and Exposition (DSC-Vol.66) 

3
Caged Fluorescence
  • Fluorescent dye chemically locked in a stable
    molecule until hit with NdYAG laser which
    uncages it.
  • Uncaged dye is pumped with Microblue diode pumped
    laser.
  • Fluorescence is imaged with CCD camera.
  • (Molho. Et.at. 1998)

4
Results
Experiment matches prediction for uniform plug
flow for some cases studied. No discernable
boundary layers, but some diffusion. http//microf
luidics.stanford.edu/caged.htm
5
More Results
In other cases though, flow looks very much like
a pressure-driven Poiseuille flow
Electro-Kinetic Flow can actually induce a
pressure gradient in a capillary flow and thus
alter the basic flow structure http//microfluidic
s.stanford.edu/caged.htm
6
Comparison with CFD
Electro-Osmotic flow is relatively simple to
model with standard CFD solvers. For pressure
driven micro-capillary flow, CFD predicts flow
field remarkably well, as shown in comparison of
experimental and computational results at
left. (Molho et.al. 1998)
7
Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV)
Cross-correlation
Velocity vector
Interrogation windows 32x32 pixels, 0.6 x 0.6 mm
Images from Tsurikov and Clemens (2002)
Particle fields 1024 x 1024 pixels 21 x 21 mm
Raw velocity field
Mean velocity subtracted Turbulent velocity field
  • Seed flow with particles
  • Dont affect fluid characteristics
  • Accurately follow the flow
  • Illuminate flow at two time instances separated
    by ?t (e.g. using NdYAG laser)
  • Record images of particle fields (e.g. CCD
    camera)
  • Determine particle displacement
  • Calculate velocity as V? ?x/ ?t

8
The Need for ?-PIV
  • The physics is not very clear in micro flows
    (e.g. surface tension)
  • Typical length scales of 1-100 ?m, traditional
    flow diagnostics cannot be employed
  • Most micro-flow measurements were limited to bulk
    properties of the flow like wall pressure and
    bulk velocity
  • PIV enables measurements of velocity field in two
    dimensions

9
Other efforts
  • Particle streak imaging by Brody et al. (1996)
  • Less accurate than pulsed velocimetry
    measurements
  • Lanzilloto et al. (1997) used X-ray micro-imaging
    of emulsion droplets
  • Emulsion is deformable, large and not a good
    tracker of the flowfield
  • Optical Doppler Tomographic imaging by Chen et
    al. (1997) using Michelson interferometry
  • Single point measurement

10
?-PIV
  • Particles used must be small enough to
  • Follow the flow
  • Should not clog the device
  • They must also be large enough to
  • Emit sufficient light
  • Sufficiently damp out Brownian motion
  • Particles are tagged with a fluorescent dye
    hence actually imaging the fluorescence
  • Elastic scattering measurements are more
    difficult to employ in the micro-scale
  • Inelastic scattering like fluorescence can be
    readily filtered out

11
?-PIV
  • Errors in measurement due to Brownian motion when
    measuring velocities of 10 ?m/sec
  • Error induced by Brownian motion sets a lower
    limit on the time separation between the images

12
First ?-PIV system
From Santiago et al. (1998)
  • Essentially a microscope imaging fluorescence
    from the seed particles

13
State of the art ?-PIV system
From Meinhart et al. (1999)
  • http//microfluidics.stanford.edu/piv.htm

14
Demonstration of ?-PIV
  • Hele-Shaw flow (Re3e-4)
  • used the first ?-PIV system discussed before
  • Micro-channel flow
  • Uses the laser based system

15
Velocity fields Hele-Shaw
From Santiago et al. (1998)
  • Shows instantaneous and average images
  • Effect of Brownian motion goes away on averaging
  • Spatial resolution 6.9 ?m x 6.9 ?m x 1.5 ?m

16
Velocity Fields in a Micro-channel
  • Shows mean velocity profiles in a micro-channel
  • Measurements agree within 2 to analytical
    solutions

From Meinhart et al. (1999)
17
Comparison to analytical solution
From Meinhart et al. (1999)
18
Thermometry of Nanoelectronics
Techniques
Spatial Resolution
Infrared Thermometry
1-10 mm Laser Surface Reflectance
1 mm Raman Spectroscopy
1 mm Liquid Crystals
1 mm Near-Field
Optical Thermometry lt 100 nm
Scanning Thermal Microscopy (SThM) lt 100 nm
Diffraction limit for far-field optics
19
Scanning Thermal Microscopy
Atomic Force Microscope (AFM) Thermal
Probe
Laser
Deflection Sensing
Cantilever
Temperature sensor
Sample
X-Y-Z Actuator
20
Microfabricated Thermal Probes
Pt Line
Tip
Pt-Cr Junction
Laser Reflector
SiNx Cantilever
Cr Line
Shi, Kwon, Miner, Majumdar, J. MicroElectroMechani
cal Sys., 10, p. 370 (2001)
21
Thermal Imaging of Nanotubes
Multiwall Carbon Nanotube
Topography
Topography
3 V
m
88
A
m
m
1
m
1
m
Spatial Resolution
V)
m
50 nm
Thermal signal (
Distance (nm)
Shi, Plyosunov, Bachtold, McEuen, Majumdar, Appl.
Phys. Lett., 77, p. 4295 (2000)
22
Metallic Single Wall Nanotube
Topographic
Thermal
DTtip
A
B
C
D
2 K
0
1 mm
23
Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor
(MOSFET)
24
Ideal MOSFET
VGgt0
25
Pinch-Off IV
26
Thermal Circuit
Particle transport theory
Fouriers law of heat conduction
27
Joule Heating inHigh-Field Devices
Localized heat generation near the pinch-off point
28
Future Challenge Temperature Mapping of
Nanotransistors
SOI Devices
SiGe Devices
  • Low thermal conductivities of SiO2 and SiGe
  • Interface thermal resistance
  • Short (10-100 nm) channel effects (ballistic
    transport, quantum transport)
  • Phonon bottleneck (optical-acoustic phonon
    decay length gt channel length)
  • Few thermal measurements are available to verify
    simulation results
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