University of Wollongong
Browse

Colloidal transport on magnetic garnet filmsw

Download (594.13 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 05:13 authored by Tierno Pietro, Frances Sagues, Tom Johansen, Thomas Fischer
This article reports several recent discoveries related to the controlled transport of paramagnetic colloidal particles above magnetic garnet films. The garnet films are thin uniaxial ferromagnetic films in which ferromagnetic domains can be organized into symmetric patterns consisting of stripes or bubbles and generate strong local magnetic field gradients. Application of an external homogeneous magnetic field on a larger scale compared to the spatial periodicity of the magnetic pattern in the film modulates the potential generated at its surface and induces the controlled motion of colloidal particles placed above the film. Several novel dynamical regimes are observed and reported, from localized trajectories to direct particle transport, depending on the geometry of the underlying magnetic pattern and on the parameters, which control the external driving field, such as frequency, strength and direction. Moreover, we show that this strategy allows separation and sorting of bi-disperse particle systems based on the particle size as well as the transport of chemical or biological cargoes attached to the colloidal carriers. Controlled transport of micro-sized cargoes (chemical or biological) by colloidal particle carriers in a microfluidic environment can bring significant contributions in several fields from targeted drug delivery to the realization of precise fluid-based micro-scale devices.

History

Citation

Tierno, P., Sagues, F., Johansen, T. H. and Fischer, T. (2009). Colloidal transport on magnetic garnet filmsw. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 11 (42), 9615-9625.

Journal title

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Volume

11

Issue

42

Pagination

9615-9625

Language

English

RIS ID

32469

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC