Off-axis response for particles passing through long apertures in Coulter-type counters
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- Published by IOP Publishing in Measurement Science and Technology
- Vol. 1 (6) , 471-474
- https://doi.org/10.1088/0957-0233/1/6/001
Abstract
A novel modification of the resistive pulse technique (Coulter principle) has been used to investigate how the measured resistance pulse amplitude depends on the off-axis particle position in long pores. By pressure drive, a particle enters a current-carrying pore and an increase in resistance proportional to the particle volume is detected. When the particle exits the pore, the pressure is reversed such that the particle re-enters the pore and the same particle can thus be studied for a long time. In Poiseuille flow, solid spheres migrate to an off-axis equilibrium position and this non-linear hydrodynamic effect has been utilised to study how the measured pulse amplitude from a single particle flowing back and forth through a pore increases when the particle migrates closer to the pore wall. The increase in pulse amplitude corresponding to a radial particle displacement from the pore axis to the wall is found to be less than 10% for all particle and pore sizes studied. This is considerably less than predicted by the off-axis upper-limit theory of Smythe.Keywords
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