Abstract
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is vital in biological and medical research, but microfluidic PCR chips often suffer from limited reagent processing capacity and slow thermal response under high flow rates. To address this, we designed three serpentine microfluidic chips with double-sided heaters: a standard serpentine chip (case 1), one with unchamfered channel expansion areas (case 2), and one with chamfered expansions (case 3). Using numerical simulations, we analyzed temperature, velocity, and pressure distributions at flow rates of 75, 125, and 175 μL/min. At 175 μL/min, case 2 showed a 41% higher pressure drop than case 1, but also demonstrated significantly improved thermal performance: the constant-temperature zones were extended by 30 mm, 10 mm, and 30 mm at 95 °C, 72 °C, and 55 °C, respectively; the temperature gradient in expansion zones increased by 1.6 times; and the maximum temperature difference decreased by 80%. Case 2 achieved the best trade-off between thermal performance and flow resistance, making it suitable for high-flow-rate PCR applications.