PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Mixing fluids efficiently in confined spaces: Let the fingers do the working

Research shows that viscosity contrast can induce fast mixing

2011-05-13
(Press-News.org) Getting two fluids to mix in small or confined spaces is a big problem in many industries where, for instance, the introduction of one fluid can help extract another — like water pumped underground can release oil trapped in porous rock — or where the mixing of liquids is the essential point of the process. A key example of the latter is microfluidics technology, which allows for the controlled manipulation of fluids in miniscule channels often only a few hundred nanometers wide.

Microfluidic devices were first introduced in the 1980s and for many years were best known for their use in ink-jet printers, but have since been introduced in other fields, including the chemical analysis of blood or other sera in lab-on-a-chip technologies. These devices — usually not much larger than a stick of chewing gum — sometimes rely on nano-sized moving components, the geometry of the grooved channels or pulsed injections to induce a mixing of the fluids. But researchers in MIT's Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering suggest that a simpler method might be equally, if not more, effective.

"Getting two fluids to mix in a very tight space is difficult because there's not much room for a disorderly flow," said Professor Ruben Juanes, the ARCO Associate Professor in Energy Studies and principal investigator on the research. "But with two fluids of highly contrasting viscosity, the thinner fluid naturally creates disorder, which proves to be a marvelously efficient means of mixing."

In an analysis published online May 12 in Physical Review Letters (PRL), the researchers show that the injection of a thin or low-viscosity fluid into a much more viscous fluid (think of water spurting into molasses) will cause the two fluids to mix very quickly via a physical process known as viscous fingering. The thinner liquid, say the researchers, will form fingers as it enters the thicker liquid, and those fingers will form other fingers, and so on until the two liquids have mixed uniformly.

They also found that for maximum mixing to occur quickly, the ideal ratio of the viscosity of any two fluids depends on the speed at which the thinner liquid is injected into the thicker one.

The research team of Juanes, postdoctoral associate Luis Cueto-Felgueroso and graduate students Birendra Jha and Michael Szulczewski, made a series of controlled experiments using mixtures of water and glycerol, a colorless liquid generally about a thousand times more viscous than water. By alternating the viscosity of the liquids and the velocity of the injection flows, Jha was able to create a mathematical model of the process and use that to determine the best viscosity ratio for a particular velocity. He is lead author on the PRL paper.

"It's been known for a very long time that a low viscosity fluid will finger through the high viscosity fluid," said Juanes. "What was not known is how this affects the mixing rate of the two fluids. For instance, in the petroleum industry, people have developed increasingly refined models of how quickly the low viscosity fluid will reach the production well, but know little about how it will mix once it makes contact with the oil."

Similarly, Juanes said, in microfluidics technology, the use of fluids of different viscosities has not been seriously proposed as a mixing mechanism, but the new study indicates it could work very efficiently in the miniscule channels.

"We can now say that on average, the viscosity of the fluid injected should be about 10 times lower than that of the fluid into which it is injected," said Juanes. "If the contrast is greater than 10, then the injection should be done more slowly to achieve the fastest maximum mixing. Otherwise, the low viscosity fluid will create a single channel through the thicker fluid, which is not ideal."

Cueto-Felgueroso said a similar process is at work in the engraved channels of a microfluidic device and in subsurface rock containing oil. "Mixing fluids at small scales or velocities is difficult because you can't rely on turbulence: it would be hard to stir milk into your coffee if you were using a microscopic cup," Cueto-Felgueroso said. "With viscous fingering, you let the fluids do the job of stirring."

###

Movie 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NZEB8tQ3eOM
Movie 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baqWMeKTAkU



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NREL's multi-junction solar cells teach scientists how to turn plants into powerhouses

2011-05-13
Plants can overcome their evolutionary legacies to become much better at using biological photosynthesis to produce energy, the kind of energy that can power vehicles in the near future, an all-star collection of biologists, physicists, photochemists, and solar scientists has found. A U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) workshop that drew a prestigious collection of 18 scientists to compare the efficiency of plants and photovoltaic solar cells led to an important and provocative scholarly article in today's issue of the journal Science. Two of the scientists are from DOE's ...

Risking one's neck for better grog: Mutinies reveal tipping points for collective unrest

Risking ones neck for better grog: Mutinies reveal tipping points for collective unrest
2011-05-13
Films depicting the 1787 mutiny aboard the British ship HMS Bounty show sailors living cheek by jowl, being forced to dance, enduring storm-ridden Cape of Good Hope crossings to satisfy the ship captain's ego and being flogged for trivial reasons. We may not think that these harsh conditions have much relevance today. But mutinies continue to occur, especially in the armed forces of developing nations. And mutinies have similarities to other types of rebellions, including worker strikes, riots, prison rebellions and political uprisings. University of Washington sociologists ...

Solar cells more efficient than photosynthesis -- for now

2011-05-13
EAST LANSING, Mich. — In a head-to-head battle of harvesting the sun's energy, solar cells beat plants, according to a new paper in Science. But scientists think they can even up the playing field, says researcher David Kramer at Michigan State University. Plants are less efficient at capturing the energy in sunlight than solar cells mostly because they have too much evolutionary baggage. Plants have to power a living thing, whereas solar cells only have to send electricity down a wire. This is a big difference because if photosynthesis makes a mistake, it makes toxic ...

Diagnosing 'seizures' in the US economy

Diagnosing seizures in the US economy
2011-05-13
Since 2008, the U.S. economy has been "seizing" uncontrollably. Now a Tel Aviv University researcher says that a comparison of the multifaceted economic downturn with the uncontrolled spasms of an epileptic is not inappropriate — and may say something about the origins of the disaster. In a recent article published in the journal PLoS ONE, Prof. Eshel Ben-Jacob of Tel Aviv University's School of Physics and Astronomy, his doctoral student Dror Y. Kenett and economist Dr. Gitit Gur-Gershgorn examined the dynamics of the S&P 500 over the last decade, employing methods originally ...

Wildlife Conservation Society recommends health measures for Argentina's caiman ranches

Wildlife Conservation Society recommends health measures for Argentinas caiman ranches
2011-05-13
The Wildlife Conservation Society and other organizations released a new study recommending a disease screening program for farm-raised caiman in ranching facilities in Argentina to ensure the safety of people and wildlife alike. The recommendations focus on two crocodilian species, the yacare caiman and broad-snouted caiman, both of which are reared in caiman ranches for sustainable harvest. The research team sought to assess the presence of potentially harmful bacteria in captive-raised caiman at a typical ranching facility in Argentina's Chaco region, where several ...

Vidaroo Contracts with Emmis Radio for Expanded Use of its Video Platform

2011-05-13
Vidaroo Corporation today announced that it has contracted with Emmis Radio, a subsidiary of Emmis Communications Corporation, for use of its video distribution and syndication platform for Emmis' 22 radio stations. Vidaroo's Enterprise software will allow Emmis' radio stations to deliver its website's video distribution through use of Vidaroo's centralized management platform, as well as distribute live and on-demand content and branded time-of-day programming. In addition to use of the Vidaroo platform for video distribution and syndication, Emmis will also be able ...

AGU Journal highlights -- May 12, 2011

2011-05-13
The following highlights summarize research papers that have been recently published in Geophysical Research Letters (GRL), Water Resources Research (WRR), the Journal of Geophysical Research-Oceans (JGR-C), and the Journal of Geophysical Research-Solid Earth (JGR-B). In this release: New freshwater source for Antarctic coastal waters Phytoplankton affect clouds and precipitation River model enhanced by floodplain dynamics Weighing natural variability in projected precipitation change Study suggests no slowing of Atlantic 'conveyor belt' current Warming, salinity ...

Introducing the New Contour+ Camera, Available at LaunchHelmetCams.com

Introducing the New Contour+ Camera, Available at LaunchHelmetCams.com
2011-05-13
Contour, Inc is a market leader in wearable video technology, introducing innovative new features such as integrated GPS tracking and bluetooth connectivity to smartphone devices. Contour have just announced the release of their latest product, the Contour+ camera. The Contour+ builds on the popular Contour GPS model with added connectivity and refined features and has been designed with the broadcast and pro-sumer market in mind. Contour cameras are renowned for their ease of use thanks to the large sliding start/stop switch on top of the camera and their unique rotating ...

Yale scientists discover new method for engineering human tissue regeneration

2011-05-13
If pending clinical trials prove successful, a new discovery published in The FASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org) could represent a major scientific leap toward human tissue regeneration and engineering. In a research report appearing online, Yale scientists provide evidence to support a major paradigm shift in this specialty area from the idea that cells added to a graft before implantation are the building blocks of tissue, to a new belief that engineered tissue constructs can actually induce or augment the body's own reparative mechanisms, including complex tissue ...

Cats pass disease to wildlife, even in remote areas

Cats pass disease to wildlife, even in remote areas
2011-05-13
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Researchers tracking the spread of Toxoplasma gondii – a parasite that reproduces only in cats but sickens and kills many other animals – have found infected wildlife throughout a 1,500-acre (600-hectare) natural area in central Illinois. The researchers also found dozens of free-ranging cats in the area, the Robert Allerton Park, near Monticello, Ill. Two years of tracking, trapping and motion-triggered night photography at eight sites in the park found no evidence of bobcats, but plenty of examples of feral or abandoned house cats, many of them infected ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Some of your AI prompts could cause 50 times more CO2 emissions than others

Pandora’s microbes – The battle for iron in the lungs

Unlocking the secrets of gene therapy delivery: New insights into genome ejection from AAV vectors

Scientists use AI to make green ammonia even greener

Remaking psychiatry with biological testing

Caution required when heading soccer balls

Intermittent fasting comparable to traditional diets for weight loss

Community based mentoring in Sierra Leone for pregnant adolescents and their babies doubles survival rates

Positive life outlook may protect against middle-aged memory loss, 16-year study suggests

Scientists find three years left of remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C

Anti-aging drug Rapamycin extends lifespan as effectively as eating less

Babies can sense pain before they can understand it

Consensus statement on universal chemosensory testing calls for better standardization, infrastructure, and education in the field

Two-part vaccine strategy generates a stronger, longer-lasting immune boost against HIV

How lottery-style bottle returns could transform recycling

Researchers with UTHealth Houston School of Public Health awarded $5 million to study cancer risk among firefighters in Texas

C-Path’s translational therapeutics accelerator announces new grant award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

What is a brain age gap, and how may it affect thinking and memory skills?

Food insecurity, neighborhood, lack of social support, linked to worse stroke recovery

Scientists discover new approach to gene therapy

A statement on the Supreme Court decision

Low social support and a tendency to compare yourself to others may be associated with problematic social media use, per study of 403 Italian adolescents

Which therapy works best for knee arthritis?

Seeing through a new LENS allows brain-like navigation in robots

Organ sculpting cells may hold clues to how cancer spreads

Wildfires that keep us inside might drive the spread of infectious disease, per study of the U.S. West Coast wildfires of 2020

Catching excitons in motion—ultrafast dynamics in carbon nanotubes revealed by nano-infrared spectroscopy

New research proposes framework to define and measure the biology of health

Earliest evidence of humans in the Americas confirmed in new U of A study

Tracking microbial rhythms reveals new target for treating metabolic diseases

[Press-News.org] Mixing fluids efficiently in confined spaces: Let the fingers do the working
Research shows that viscosity contrast can induce fast mixing