A microfluidic two-pump system inspired by liquid feeding in mosquitoes

ORAL

Abstract

Mosquitoes feed on nectar and blood using a two-pump system in the head-a smaller cibarial pump in line with a larger a pharyngeal pump, with a valve in between. To suck, mosquitoes transport the liquid (which may be a multi-component viscous fluid, blood) through a long micro-channel, the proboscis. In the engineering realm, microfluidic devices in biomedical applications, such as lab-on-a-chip technology, necessitate implementing a robust pump design to handle clogging and increase flow control compared to a single-pump system. In this talk, we introduce a microfluidic pump design inspired by the mosquito's two-pump system. The pumping performance (flow rate) in presence of impurities (air bubbles, soft clogs) is quantified as a function of phase difference and volume expansion of the pumps, and the elasticity of the valve.

Authors

  • Andrew Marino

    • Virginia Tech
  • Angela Goad

    • Carroll County High School
  • Mark Stremler

    • Virginia Tech
  • John Socha

    • Virginia Tech
  • Sunghwan Jung

    • Virginia Tech