Abstract
Random Positioning Machines (RPM) are commonly used to simulate microgravity for plant growth and cell culturing experiments, but not properly in multi-phase flow studies, e.g., emulsions. The implications of fluid motion induced by RPM movement patterns have only been studied for one-phase system using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). This study investigates the impact of fluid motion of 5 different RPM motion modes (0 g, 0.4 g, Clinostat of different frame rates) on dispersed droplets (d32 = 0.1-70 μm) applying scaling analysis. These computations are based on well-established fluid-dynamic laws and correlations, thereby giving microgravity researchers easier tool to evaluate potential deficiencies in their study design compared to CFD. We found that the Clinostat modes (80 deg/sec; 100 deg/sec; 120 deg/sec) induce a transitional flow regime in the continuous phase, and considerate shear rates acting on the dispersed droplets. Under certain conditions, the shear rates might even impact the average particle size, representing a major corruption in study design, which must not be mistaken as an effect of simulated microgravity. On the other hand, the 0 g and 0.4 g motion modes lead to a laminar flow in the continuous phase, low shear forces, Stokes flow surrounding the dispersed droplets, little relative droplet movement, as well as neglectable forced convection and gravitational force, thus resembling a state similar to true microgravity (0 g motion mode) and partial gravity (0.4 g motion mode).
Supplementary weblinks
Title
Movement Data of the Random Positioning Machine for Different Motion Modes
Description
The movement recordings for the different motion modes (0 g; 0.4 g; Clinostat 80 deg/sec; Clinostat 100 deg/sec; Clinostat 120 deg/sec) of the Random Positioning Machine is archived and publicly available in the Nottingham Research Repository (DOI: 10.17639/nott.7406).
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