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Phys. Rev. E 61, 312–323 (2000)

Drift ratchet

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Christiane Kettner1, Peter Reimann1, Peter Hänggi1, and Frank Müller2
1Universität Augsburg, Institut für Physik, Universitätsstrasse 1, D-86135 Augsburg, Germany
2Max-Plank-Institut für Mikrostrukturphysik, Weinberg 2, 06120 Halle, Germany

Received 23 July 1999; published in the issue dated January 2000

We consider a silicon wafer, pierced by millions of identical pores with periodically varying diameters but without spatial inversion symmetry (ratchet profile). When a liquid is periodically pumped back and forth through the pores, our theory predicts a net transport of suspended micrometer-sized particles (drift ratchet). The direction of this particle current depends very sensitively on the size of the particles. For typical parameter values of the experiment, two different types of particles at an initially homogeneous 1:1 mixture are spatially separated with a purity beyond 1:1000 on a time scale of a few hours in comparably large quantities. This result is due to the highly parallel architecture of the device. The experimental realization of the setup, presently under construction, thus appears to be a promising new particle separation device, possibly superior to existing methods for particles sizes on the micrometer scale.

© 2000 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.61.312
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.61.312
PACS:
05.40.-a, 07.10.Cm, 87.80.-y