Macromolecules, Vol.38, No.15, 6680-6687, 2005
DNA molecules in microfluidic oscillatory flow
The conformation and dynamics of a single DNA molecule undergoing oscillatory pressure-driven flow in microfluidic channels are studied using Brownian dynamics simulations, accounting for hydrodynamic interactions between segments in the bulk and between the chain and the walls. Oscillatory flow provides a scenario under which the polymers may remain in the channel for an indefinite amount Of time as they are stretched and migrate away from the channel walls. We show that by controlling the chain length, flow rate, and oscillatory flow frequency we are able to manipulate the chain extension and the chain migration from the channel walls. The chain stretch and the chain depletion layer thickness near the wall are found to increase as the Weissenberg number increases and as the oscillatory frequency decreases.