Sculpting Nanoflows With Supercomputers 11
aarondubrow writes "Researchers reported results in Nature Communications on a new way of sculpting tailor-made fluid flows by placing tiny pillars in microfluidic channels [abstract; article is paywalled]. The method could allow clinicians to better separate white blood cells in a sample, increase mixing in industrial applications, and more quickly perform lab-on-a-chip-type operation. Using the Ranger and Stampede supercomputers, the researchers ran more than 1,000 simulations representing combinations of speeds, thicknesses, heights or offsets that produce unique flows. This library of transformations will help the broader community design and use sculpted fluid flows."
What they need is something like (Score:3)
Maxwell's demon [wikipedia.org]
/. servers 86'd (Score:1)
/. servers 86'd
Re: (Score:3)
It certainly does demonstrate the changing audience of /. when "George Zimmerman Acquitted In Death of Trayvon Martin" has 1256 comments, and "Sculpting Nanoflows With Supercomputers" has 7..
As much as we decry the aforementioned not qualifying as "News for nerds", this disparity speaks volume to the actual readership interests.
The original paper... (Score:1)
can be found here - http://biomicrofluidics.com/publications_files/Amini_NatComm2013.pdf
Microfluidic separation? (Score:3)